West Altadena

Neighbors
pass, two lines of smoke
in hooded sweatshirts,

from the sober living house
next door, as I stand in the front yard
watering dirt.

I ask little of the garden—
mere inspiration—working
my shovel into bare earth.

While witnesses in neckties
carry scriptures, county sheriff
circles the block.

A couple fights
in a hot car. They get out of
the car and back into the car.

Pressed down
where sunflowers bow,
bird-pecked,

toward the sun—my meditation
in the lawn: harvesting
seeds, shaking loose

from beheaded mammoths
those marvelous darlings
tucked inside their compartments.

They want to save me.
They want to put me under.
I keep my ear to the ground.

Source: Poetry (July/August 2024)