“Finding My Calling” by Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer

 
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with a line from “After the Japanese” by Jack Granath



A warm March day

and the blue sky

slips itself

into the list

of things to do,

and I would have to be

deaf or just plain stubborn

to not hear the call

to play outside—

and damn, but 

I’m stubborn, 

so the world

sends a bobcat,

a red-tailed hawk

and a whole herd of elk

to the yard. 

What’s a busy woman 

to do

but surrender? 

I don’t. 

Head down, I get 

the work done. 

I put on the blinders

of responsibility

until a poem says to me, 

You do the right thing, 

citizen, and my chest pounds

in urgent code:

that. means. you.

and I put down

the work and walk 

into the day 

to do my duty, 

which is to meet the world 

that will never 

send an email, 

the world 

that will never knock, 

will never call, 

but will always 

say welcome, 

citizen, welcome.


 
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About Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer
She/Her/Hers

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer co-hosts Emerging Form (a podcast on creative process), the Stubborn Praise poetry series, Talking Gourds Poetry Club and Secret Agents of Change (a kindness cabal). Her poems have been featured on A Prairie Home Companion, American Life in Poetry, PBS Newshour and Oprah Magazine. Her most recent book, Hush, won the Halcyon Prize and Naked for Tea was a finalist for the Able Muse Book Award. She served as the Western Slope Poet Laureate (2015-2017) and was a finalist for Colorado Poet Laureate in 2019.

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A Hundred Falling Veils

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