They call it the desert. A wasteland
with bones sticking up through the sand.
A plain, dry, yellowing
spreading epidemic-like for miles.
But the first thing you notice is you’re alive.
Palm fronds wave you in, smooth and gentle
like a Kenny G in the wind,
causing your upper lip to curl.
You smile, full, back to the sun,
forgetting that inner chill you’ve been
lugging along with your bad knee,
that ache in your neck, the pain in your lungs.
Late winter, a touch of spring, and citrus blossoms perfume the air.
You want to sip that pink sherbert sky,
tear off a piece and hold it to your lover’s lips for a taste,
letting it drip from your hands, and scoop some more.
You forget what you’ve been told
about harsh winters, about valleys
being metaphors for dark,
depressing no man’s lands.
You touch your fingers to your own lips,
like when you remember that kiss—
sweet as the agave growing here, soft as baja fairy dusters
blushing, flirty and brushing, smooth as aloe.
And that’s when you notice you found it—
that lost feeling of stretching yourself out
like a puppy on the lawn, or a cat in the triangle ray
slipping through the window—
seeing past the cholla
to the mighty saguaros
with their arms held high in praise—
and you know why.
© 2025 Jennifer Wagner
After Ted Kooser’s “So This Is Nebraska” poem for dVerse Poetics. I’m hosting—come join us!
Located in the Sonoran Desert the “Valley of the Sun” has been the nickname for the greater Phoenix, Arizona area since the 1930’s. The Sonoran Desert, also, is the only place saguaros grow.
This brings back memories when I lived in Arizona for 8 months... all that life you found and how winter was closer to my understanding of summer.... that was until I learned that summer was more like a sauna.
ReplyDeleteJennifer this is gorgeous poetry - painterly, evocative and full of feeling just stirring underneath the surfaces, the landscapes.
ReplyDelete"You want to sip that pink sherbert sky," - oh yes I do!
Love the personal desert details that seems to defy what I think a desert looks like. Specially love the citrus blossoms and pink sherbet sky. How uplifting this reads, specially the ending part Jennifer. Thanks for being our guest host!
ReplyDeleteOh this is so evocative, with its palm fronds and saguaros. I especially love the tasting of that pink sherbert sky! Wonderful.
ReplyDeleteBeautifully written, Jennifer. I can feel the desert in your words and images, that draws you to this place!
ReplyDelete"You want to sip that pink sherbert sky,
ReplyDeletetear off a piece and hold it to your lover’s lips for a taste:"
OMG!
What a gorgeous poem
Thanks for dropping by my blog
Much♡love
I have never experienced a desert, Jennifer, so thank you for giving me a glimpse of yours. From the opening stanza, it seems dangerous, ‘a wasteland with bones sticking up through the sand’, but then you make it charming, especially the palm fronds that ‘wave you in, smooth and gentle’, the citrus blossoms that perfume the air, and ‘the mighty saguaros with their arms held high in praise’.
ReplyDeleteThis resonates deeply as I adore the deserts of Arizona and New Mexico. The imagery is divine.... "Palm fronds wave you in, smooth and gentle
ReplyDeletelike a Kenny G in the wind" and you want to sip that pink sherbert sky". Beautifully rendered!
I've flown over deserts & seen them on-screen, but never actually visited one, though I always thought I'd be mind-blown, and your work here convinces me more deeply. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteThis is beautiful Jennifer!
ReplyDeleteI do not know why it says I am anonymous?
ReplyDeleteYour site is not recognizing me?
ReplyDeleteSounds very much like our outback, and yet in miles of nothing there is always an array of life, colour and softness as you capture so well in your poem.
ReplyDeleteTed was my mentor, using his book, "The Poetry Home Repair Manual: Practical . . " I quit after I worked my very useful "How to" up to prose writing, I don't like prose writing and am not good at all with prose.
ReplyDeleteThank you for writing of him. BTW I am from Nebraska, I had a regents scholarship which I used for three semesters there . I finished up with three degrees, San Jacinto College (1) and U of Houston (2). I taught at San Jacinto for 22 years and retired from there. (Just saying. Thanks again for hosting. I didn't write for you though.
From visiting my sister who once lived in one, I now the desert is anything but a wasteland. Something about the stark beauty stirred the muse in me. That stretching out. Hard to describe but thanks for taking me back.
ReplyDeleteFrom the harsh description of the desert at the outset, you paint an increasingly rich picture of the wonders to be found there, Jennifer. I particularly like "You want to sip that pink sherbert sky,
ReplyDeletetear off a piece and hold it to your lover’s lips for a taste,".
Thanks for the prompt which I failed to do in time but have posted in OLN - will we see you on Saturday?
You painted a magical desert in your poem. Your love of your place shines through.
ReplyDeleteAn excellent walk through the desert and an excellent poem to do it with.
ReplyDelete