Cat Flyer – 20th November 2025

Reba Spike on Unsplash.

Who coaxed the cat to the sky?
Watched it fly away like that
Spectators wonder just why
Some rat did that to a cat

And now, how to coax it down?
As it floats around so free
So absurd that it could drown
Chasing birds out to the sea

Maybe meow a message
Learn how to coax a human
To shoot down this odd carriage
From reknown to solution!

Shared with dVerse Q236 (but not a quadrille) – coax and Melissa’s FFFC #347 image prompt above.

Time Well Spent – 19th November 2025

Above the roaring chaos of the rooms
The petty squabbles of emotional fools
Moulding little munchkins while running on fumes
Stuck in a system broken; made to be rules

Making peace amongst the many positions
Knowing little more than the best use of tools
Embracing the insistent inquisitions
Every teacher’s a student that schools

I found a job that I truly love, where I can put my whole self into it.
Shared with dVerse OLN #396 and this didn’t get many eyes and also conveniently meets the What’s Going On prompt this week too.

Let The Story Finish Itself – 18th November 2025

The neighbours gasped as the horse bolted.
What terrible luck! It could mean doom!
The farmer was patient as time unfolded.
Sure enough, a pack of horses returned soon.

More bad luck befell the farmer’s son
Who broke his leg falling from the mare.
The farmer felt there was little to be done.
The neighbours wondered why he didn’t care.

When war broke out, the conscriptors came.
The neighbours knew their kids might end up dead.
The farmer’s son was considered too lame.
‘Let the story finish itself’ is all he said.

Shared with Poetic Bloomings #568 – Nuanced Nuisance.
A poetic take on this Taoist fable:
An old farmer lived near the frontier with his son and a single horse. One morning, they woke to find the horse had broken through the fence and run away.
The neighbours gathered, shaking their heads sympathetically. “How terrible!” they said. “You’ve lost your only horse. What bad luck!”
The farmer listened quietly, then shrugged. “Maybe so, maybe not. We’ll see.”
A week later, the horse returned—but not alone. It had joined a herd of wild horses and led them all back to the farm. Suddenly, the farmer owned a dozen magnificent animals.
The same neighbours returned, their eyes bright with admiration. “How wonderful!” they exclaimed. “You’re rich now! What incredible fortune!”
Again, the farmer listened calmly. “Maybe so, maybe not. We’ll see.”
The next month, while trying to tame one of the wild horses, the farmer’s son was thrown violently and broke his leg. He would walk with a limp for the rest of his life.
Back came the neighbours, their faces creased with concern. “How awful!” they cried. “Your poor son! What a terrible thing to happen!”
The farmer tended his son’s wound and replied as before: “Maybe so, maybe not. We’ll see.”
The following spring, war broke out. Military officers swept through the village, conscripting every able-bodied young man for the army. When they came to the farmer’s house and saw his limping son, they passed him by.
The neighbours, whose own sons had been taken to fight in a distant war, returned once more. “How fortunate!” they said, their voices mixed with envy and relief. “Your son gets to stay home because of his injury. What a blessing in disguise!”
The old farmer looked across his fields where his son worked contentedly among the horses, and smiled his familiar smile.
“Maybe so, maybe not. We’ll see.”

Lovely List – 17th November 2025

  • The first coffee of the day
  • Watching our kittens play
  • Whiskey on a winter’s night
  • Holding someone special tight
  • Memories triggered by song
  • Feeling right where you belong
  • Watching all the children grow
  • Teaching all of what you know
  • A great poem that you wrote
  • Inspiration from a quote
  • Causing a new friend to smile
  • Contemplating for a while
  • Watching the river flow by
  • Migrations across the sky
  • A forest walk in the rain
  • Waking up again, again

Shared with Poets and Storytellers United #203 – love/hate

Every Dog – 16th November 2025

Shared with dVerse MTB: The Roundel
*’The USA has met its enemy and it is the USA’ was taken from a Substack article I was reading but forgot to note the link.

The USA has met its enemy
and it is the USA, every day.
No one wants to play with the USA.

The truth is there for everyone to see.
All that’s left are the dreams of yesterday.
The USA has met its enemy
and it is the USA, every day.

They’ve been beaten at their own game, you see,
there’s none left outside for them to betray,
and so the empire is fading away.
The USA has met its enemy
and it is the USA, every day.
No one wants to play with the USA.

Container Drivers (Version) – 14th November 2025

Let’s heighten tensions with China
We’ve got to keep them down
Grey caps and grey trousers
Sweatshops will keep them down
We are containers, we are the drivers

Sideways perception
Allied ascension
Maintained low wages
Increased production
Therefore profit margins
We are the containers, and the drivers

The rhetoric was for two days
Maintained headlines for two days
Militarised, cold and grey
And sold so many papers
We are containers, we are the drivers

This is not our town
Alienation came from the ground
Hard work did not keep them down
Hard work bought them the town
With their containers and their drivers

J. Ma’s a distant relation
Of 1 billion full-time workers
So they all said ‘no thanks’
In commune and closed ranks
With their containers and their drivers

A wound self-inflicted
Partnerships invalidated
FOIP – branded strategy
Diplomatic engagements ended
With AI containers and robot drivers

Shared with dVerse Poetics – Pivot referencing the USA’s Pivot To Asia. For some reason, I had the Fall’s ‘Container Drivers’ stuck in my head and so the poem can be sung along in time with that (if you wish!)

Close To Good – 12th November 2025

What happens to the words we never say?

I’m trying to be understood
and all my words seem far too small today

to form anything close to good.

A tiny thought soon becomes overwhelmed
by the magnitude of the sea

so that I will no longer feel compelled

to pour these words right out of me.

Uninspired, then soon unmotivated

I dam the river with dead wood;

never to see this thought celebrated

or form anything close to good.

Not quite the dreaded writer’s block. Just the idea that everything can feel inconsequential, shouting into the void. At the time of writing this, I feel like I have read 100 uninspired poems that trigger nothing in me. I purged them from my ‘to-be-read’ folder. At other times, I would have found something within each of them that may have given me some new formation of ideas.

I’ll not stop looking, though. But that’s a different poem.

“my words seem far too small” is linked to the author Jae Rose. I have a feeling I found the first line from elsewhere, too, but I no longer recall where.

They Are Poets – 11th November 2025

there are words I don’t like

to see in poems

they are the liars

they are the poetic

and the words poets use to pretend

they are poets


I have not let these words enter

my vocabulary

I cannot bring them to mind

now that you ask

they don’t belong to revolution

or the masses

and they are the true poets

Written (after the fact) for the GloPoWriMo Day 10 prompt:
write a poem that uses alliteration and punning. See if you can’t work in references to at least one word you have trouble spelling, and one that you’ve never quite been able to perfectly remember the meaning of.

I guess I didn’t really hit this prompt but this is the inspiration that arose from it. Somewhat a manifesto.