Driving through my neighborhood,
I find myself pulling over to curbs
to step outside on an unseasonably
warm March afternoon, two days
before actual spring, compelled
by the reemergence of colors
long stashed for winter trumpeting,
Look-at-me! look-at-me! So I do,
stopping to photograph poppies
the color of fresh lava preening
by a picturesque fence. But it’s
waves of pink dogwood blossoms
bobbing from a tree on 39th Street
that really get me. She’s a quiet,
unassuming neighbor I’ve been
acquainted with for years,
though at the moment she’s taking
a prima donna turn, showing off
her spring colors before she fades
into green like others around her.
Which is why I like to stop to admire
her now. These blossoms that arrive
arrive early and leave soon in favor
of leaves to come deserve our
admiration, even for a moment.
We all deserve such admiration,
even the most ordinary among us
that some might consider weeds.
Like the little yellow flowers
springing from newly greening
clover, petaled suns beaming
a few inches off the ground.
We don’t need to know their
names to pause and say, “How
bright and cheerful you are.
Thanks for making me smile.”
And if we’re lucky,
when the light is just right,
we might catch them
smiling back.












