Monday, December 30, 2013

I left my heart in Kyoto

I left my heart in Kyoto
When the autumn leaves were so brilliantly red
I walked the old city with friends long ago met
And marveled at its sights in the beautiful weather we had

At the temples we washed our hands
Before entering the main chambers bare-footed
We admired a thousand and one statues of Kannon
Who protects us with her thousand outstretched arms

We climbed the stairs of a temple lit up at night
Traversed the torri gates of the Fushimi shrine
Crossed the river where our friends had spent their time
And tasted food from a vendor on the side

We drank green tea swirled in golden flecks
Sampled sweet morsels given to us to try
We had ramen and udon the Japanese style
Ate our fills of sushi and warmed our bodies with wine

On the hill that stands Kiyomizu-dera
We read our fortunes from omikuji and tested our luck
We meditated in a peaceful morning at a rock garden
Then strolled the ground of the temple of Peaceful Dragon

We saw the reflection of the Golden Pavilion
With its phoenix atop on the mirror pond
Rebuilt from the original temple at its very site
Where the glory of Yoshimitsu pervaded ‘til this day

With sorrow we bid Kyoto goodbye
Taking our memories with us on a bullet train ride
Falling asleep after a weekend of delight
We awoke to the wonders of Tokyo Christmas lights




Thursday, December 26, 2013

Janet

For Janet, from whom love flowed without ever pausing, to whom I dedicate this page, who embraced life with a zeal and a giggle. Near the end of your life, you watched your son get married, laughed with your friends, dressed up for Halloween, met your potential future in-laws, held your loved ones close; and with determination and against the odds, you had swum in a volcanic crater, glided across a zip wire, and done horseback riding. You were truly LIVING the months up to your going to heaven, not dying as many had feared.
Janet, when I read this poem by Mary Elizabeth Frye, I think of you. You are the energy, the love, the happiness, the laughter. You are life.
 
Do not stand at my grave and weep,
I am not there; I do not sleep.
I am a thousand winds that blow,
I am the diamond glints on snow,
I am the sunlight on ripened grain,
I am the gentle autumn rain.
When you awaken in the morning’s hush
I am the swift uplifting rush
Of quiet birds in circled flight.
I am the soft stars that shine at night.
Do not stand at my grave and cry,
I am not there; I did not die.
 
In my language, the poem may say:
Xin em đừng khóc bên mộ tôi.
Tôi đã bay xa, tôi đâu nằm yên giấc.
Tôi là gió thổi, là mây bay,
Là lóng lánh kim cương trên tuyết trắng,
Là ánh sáng mặt trời trên lúa non.
Tôi là mưa mùa thu rơi nhè nhẹ.
Khi em tỉnh dậy bình minh còn yên tĩnh,
Thấy những con chim tung cánh bay—
Đó là tôi rạo rực chuyến dạo chơi.
Tôi là ngôi sao chiếu sáng ban đêm.
Em ơi đừng khóc bên mộ tôi.
Tôi đâu có đó, tôi vẫn còn đây.
 
I thought I’d be crying, but I’m smiling. The sadness is there, but I feel a peace that is passed down from above, telling me you are free from pain and you are on a fun journey.


Dedicated to Janet Vo, who died on Christmas Eve 2013.

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Collage #7

How do I love you
Let me count the way
One when you’re happy
Two when you have a pumpkin
Three when you’re scared
Four when you’re on the floor
Five when you cry
Six when you smile
Seven when you’re in orange
Eight when you play
Nine when you’re a-swinging
Ten when I held you in my arms
Oh my goodness
This will take me all night
And all of the next day
And all of the next month
And the month after that
Until your first birthday
And I will not yet be done
Do you realize
It will take me a very long time
So let me just say
I love you ‘till all the numbers run out


Saturday, November 16, 2013

Friendship

Looking in my friend’s eyes, what do I see?
Her passion never wavers, her strength never fades.
Her love’s always full, her life’s a great journey,
Her feet go where her heart leads the way.

Her heart touches so many others,
Her love fills so many empty holes.
Joy and laughter amid sorrow and pain,
We are the web that she cast, the strength that she built.



Friday, November 8, 2013

The Star of My Show

You’re the magnet I can’t escape
With the impish grin I can’t resist
My heart lurches, my head spins
You are the star of my show.

I turn around and see your face
I need your every angle, mood, and frame
Camera ready I take aim
You are the star of my show






On October 2013 Visit

Monday, October 21, 2013

Collage #6

Your sweetness permeates my being
Your smiles calm my troubles
You are a gift wrapped in love
Growing up in a sea of kisses


Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Happy 90th Birthday to Dad/Bill/Grandpa/Great-grandpa

It is a merry time, we
Don our festive clothes.
Joyfully we gather to
Sing a happy birthday song to you.

You have been a steady rock
On which people had leaned.
Today you’re to relax and
Let the fun begin.

So kick off your shoes and
Sit back on a chair.
Close your eyes if you dare,
But stay alert for a new fanfare.

Nine decades have gone by –
Your life enriched – love or travail.
As you listen to the music, let
It gently take you back in time.

Time goes fast and time goes slow –
Time twirls around in a beautiful snow –
Time brings storms that after passing through,
Leaves rainbows of different hues.

Time changes and time is the same –
Time is lovely as you gaze at her name –
Time is harsh when life is rough, but
Time always brings you love, hope, and dreams.

Time lets the children learn and grow –
Time mellows the hardships you go through –
Time multiplies the blessings you receive –
Time brings us together now and again.

So make sure you wear a big smile, for
Everyone is feeling fine, and
Everything is going to be alright,
The moment though will pass will stay a while.

Enjoy the tasty feast,
You deserve a lovely treat.
Far and near we come to wish you,
A happiest ninetieth birthday there has ever been.

Friday, August 30, 2013

Collage 5

I want time to slow
And summer not to end
So nothing’s growing fast
And the innocence remains

I put away the old collage
But not the images
Of winter, spring, and summer
The seasons when joy prevailed

I know when fall does come
Something will surely change
My love will stay the same
And the collaging will not end


Saturday, July 27, 2013

Journey With You

Journey With You
For thầy T.H.C. and all my friends, especially those battling life-threatening illnesses
July 2013

You say life is like a train trip
It is hard to say goodbye
At each station of your life
When someone has to get off
If that someone is a friend

You watch people come and go
You meet people as you dine
You sit across a stranger
Who becomes a friend
Holding a place in your heart

You want to hold on so dearly
Everything love has to give
You want to touch so closely
The people who are so near
The people who share your journey

It is strength that you are after
It is love that you’re yearning for
It’s a miracle that you dare hope for
To keep everything the same
To make everything better

I give you everything I could do
I wish you everything I care for
I’ll miss you if you ever leave
And my love does not stop then
And my love will never cease

My train trip will not be the same
If you are no longer on it
I will treasure every moment
When we laugh and cry together
For who knows what tomorrow will bring us

I pray that we are granted
With much time on earth to share
Time to give and time to heal
Time to live and time to spend
Time to feel the wonder of love life offers

For you are the person I met
In the good fortune of my life
Who became a dear friend of mine  
Who gives me so much I feel blessed
You will forever be in my heart

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Collages 3&4

This morning when I said goodbye,
In your sleep your fingers grasped mine.
Already I missed your smiles,
Holding you tight and comforting your cries.
The twinkle in your eyes was a shining light,
The peal of your laughter rang loud with delight.
Softly I bent down to touch your face,
And whispered lovely things to be caught in dreams.
May sweet slumbers rain on you each night,
And there be joy to fill you heart always.
Sleep tight, my dear, and grow strong each day.
I wait ‘till once more you’re under my warm embrace.


Saturday 7/6/2013



Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Collage 2

Gazing at you I forget,
The problems my life possessed.
Because nothing is to stay,
You’re not the same as yesterday.
Each day you appear afresh,
Each page filled with wonder to attest.
Faithfully I change the collage,
That holds your images from afar.
I wish I could pick up a portrait,
And turn it into the babe I embrace.
The next best thing stays on my screen,
‘Till the next time we meet again, face-to-face.


Wednesday, May 22, 2013

I Will Cheer You On


How time flew.
It was not long ago
when you were just a babe,
born when the ground was white with snow.
Dad drove the car
into the snow bank,
after you had made your first cry.
Some memories etched in our minds like
the first time we ventured forth
to the beach where the waves are calm
and the wild horses roam free.
It was the first time it closed down
in decades, if ever,
due to unsafe needles on its shore.
You had a fever.
We left in a hurry.
On the way home we visited
the emergency room.
We nursed you back to health
from a terrible pneumonia.
Over the years I watched you grow
and change with time.
How you were ready for the first day of school
and could not wait to get out of school.
How you wanted to go with me to places
and wanted to go to places without me.
How you loved math, hated math, and loved math again,
and graduated with a major in math.
I cherish who you are
and yearn for what is gone.
I rejoice in your independence
and yearn to hold you tight.
I celebrate your accomplishment
and yearn to urge you on.
I have loved you from the beginning
and my love is here till the end of time.
May the road you’ll take
bring you joy and peace.
May your heart be light,
bearing few burdens.
May you learn from failures
as you find successes.
May you never waver
from believing in yourself.
You hold the future,
and steadfastly I will cheer you on.



Dedicated to Thal
May 2013

Friday, May 17, 2013

Collage 1


At six pounds seven ounces you greeted me,
granting me a new title of bà ngoại.
How would I had known the joy you brought me,
or the warmth that generated from within
my heart, as I touched your soft skin to
my lips or gazed at your angelic face.
I might not have believed it if
someone had said my heart would skip
a beat and jump wildly,
just for a little bundle of a boy.
A collage of pictures of you I keep.
A desktop background of my electronic toy.




Thursday, April 25, 2013

Six Wondrous Days



On Day One when your parents went out –
            We discovered Photo Booth and had fun taking pictures, just the two of us.
            In your first aqua class you kicked your little legs like a little dragon would.
You turned three (months) on Day Two –
You posed and cooed at Picture People to our hearts’ delight.
We celebrated with candles and cakes at lovely Zilker Park before the night.
On Day Three Mommy went to town with Grandpa Ông –
            I fed you Mommy’s milk from a bottle and we went on a walk.
            You cried at the stroller so Daddy carried you in the sack.
On Day Four I watched you while Mommy played music at Koenig Lane –
            We went to the nursery where I rocked you to sleep before Mommy came.
            We watched the peacocks spread their feathers later at Mayfield the Camp.
On Day Five Grandpa Ông took you down a slide –
            We went to the library where you were so content on Mommy’s thigh.
            You didn't play with the other babies or the toys on the floor. Neither did I.
On Day Sixth it was my last chance to carry you on our hike –
            At Town Lake I did a silly dance so you would not cry.
            This was after we played at the pool of Barton Springs under clear sky.
Then it was all too soon when we said goodbye –
            You sat in the dreaded car seat once again to take us to our flight.
            We will miss you, Sweet Nhỏ Con Rồng! You bring us smiles.

Friday, April 12, 2013

‘Round the Carousel



dedicated to Tâm Thành
April 2013

I dream of the day when the flowers bloom
Their pink petals dance in the breeze
The summer sun will shine its brilliant rays
On the path where together we will stroll
How beautiful, the blue lake’s water  
How colorful, the carousel we ride
The horses of all shapes and sizes
Go ‘round and ‘round as we hold tight
To the memories of the precious times
We spent with each other our lives entwined
The circle goes ‘round and ‘round with no end
As forever the love of our friendship stands



Ta mơ ngày hoa nở
Nụ hồng trong gió mát
Nắng rực rỡ trên bờ
Ta cùng nhau sánh vai
Hồ thơ bao cảnh đẹp
Bên con ngựa kéo quân
Đủ mầu đủ sắc phong
Ngựa gỗ vẫn chạy vòng
Những kỷ niệm thân yêu
Quay vòng theo ngựa gỗ
Một vòng tròn bất diệt
Như tình bạn không quên


Thương tặng Tâm Thành
Mãi mãi
Tháng tư 2013






Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Trưng Vương


Old Trưng Vương

Trưng Vương, my old high school
Evoking such sweet memories
Of friends and teachers dear
Whom I still long to see

Time will make the heart forget
The breezy puppy loves
The joyous carefree days
The sorrows one lived through

But my love for Trưng Vương stays
For its fragrance’s still sweet
Even as time marches on and
As Earth turns its colored wheel

Oh how I miss seeing you
I’d wait ‘till the end of time
Let me hear from you dear friends
No matter from how far away

When we finally meet again
What happiness we’re granted
Time will be given freely
As we share life-long stories

Friends of the same school
Though not of the same class
Bring joy to my heart
As though I’ve known you for long

One day I hope we will
Under the roof of old Trưng Vương
Gather from all over the world and
Laugh around a circle - one large embrace



Tình Trưng Vương

Tình Trưng Vương dào dạt
Hương Trưng Vương ngọt ngào
Thầy cô ta vẫn nhớ
Bạn xưa lòng ước mong

Thời gian rồi mờ nhạt
Những chuyện tình mông lung
Những đê mê thoáng chốc
Những sầu cay đời người

Tình Trưng Vương vẵn thắm
Hương Trưng Vương vẫn nồng
Dù thời gian đi mãi
Hay không gian trở màu

Xa nhau bao thương nhớ
Mong nhau bao đợi chờ
Lòng vẫn mãi hoài mong
Tin bạn đường từ xa

Ngày nao ta hội ngộ
Hân hoan mừng đón chào
Trải qua bao tâm sự
Vui buồn ta thủ thê

Bạn Trưng Vương đầm ấm
Dù không cùng lớp xưa
Gặp nhau sao thân thiết
Lòng ta sao rộn rào

Ta mong có ngày về
Họp mặt cả bốn phương
Dưới mái trường yêu dấu
Hàn huyên mình có nhau 



Saturday, March 16, 2013

The Hand Squeeze


We met the winter of my sophomore year in college. I was a newbie to everything and anything America, including taking an inter-state train and ordering a dinner on it. But there I was, alone, sitting in the dome car of an Amtrak train leaving Chicago and heading south to Florida. I was en route to an adventure, greater in scope than I could have imagined, but at the time I thought confined to seeing my aunt and cousins in Ocala.

I was sitting at a window seat. In my memories, the window was to my left. The seat next to mine was vacant. It was vacant for several hours until he showed up.

Young, tall, and thin, he came with notebooks in hand. He sat at the vacant seat next to mine. He might have said a greeting. He asked me where I was from. My answer took him aback. He did not expect “Vietnam.” Later he said he only knew Vietnam as in “The Vietnam War.” Also later he said he had traveled far and was tired that day and did not want to engage in conversations. He wanted to find a “quiet” spot to sit and was happy to find a seat next to mine as I looked like someone who would be quiet and would leave him alone. I don’t blame him for thinking so. I am petite. I wore a pair of black shoes with red socks and dressed in hand-me-down clothes with no jewelry or cosmetic. I looked like a little girl.

I was reading. The book was “The Once and Future King,” one that I had borrowed from a boyfriend whom I was willing to leave behind to go embark on a new educational opportunity. As it was only the second year of my immigrating into this country, I was weak in English. As I read, I took notes of new words. Among the unfamiliar words were “decent” and “self-serving." Those two were the ones that made into memories and written records. I asked him for help and he readily obliged.

Was it that I wanted to return a favor? Was it stupidity? Was it drunkenness? (Not caused by alcohol.) Was it fate? Whatever it was, it happened. I leaned over, seeing that he was working on math problems, to ask if he wanted help. How dreadful. How presumptuous. How unlike me, a shy and cautious person. If it happened today, I’d have buried my embarrassment elsewhere. It must have been fate. Not only was he not recoiled from it, he was charmed, he was enchanted, he was intrigued, he was lured into a spell, one that I unknowingly and innocently casted and he willingly entered. He was a graduate student in mathematics. I was a sophomore in college, majoring in biology. No, he did not need help, but if he did, I was not one to provide it, even if I knew enough math to be hired under the work study program to tutor other students.

“How old are you?” and “Could I see what an Illinois driver license looks like?” He inquired. A savvy person would have known the second question was not really small talk. It must have been stupidity. I dutifully showed him my driver license. Satisfied, he engaged in large and small talks. He was relaxed and easy to talk to. I played a trick on him, a trick I learned from Marge. Marge worked at the community college I attended, in the center where I tutored. She took me under her wing and helped me adjust to life in the United States. She once told me to put on a sweater before going out. Her son thought that would offend me. He was embarrassed when she treated me like a little kid. Little did he know I liked being taken care of. Inside I was still a little girl. Marge taught me the trick of putting down the first four counting numbers on one side of a piece of paper, showing it to someone, and asking the person to pick one number without revealing it. After he chose a number, I flipped the piece of paper over. I had written on the other side “Why 3?” I had played this trick a few times and it never failed. It did not fail that day either. He was amazed. He thought I was magic. He didn’t tell me so at the time, but I read his diary much later. I assume I was magic because of the choosing-a-number trick, but I never really confirmed it. Sometimes it’s best to let our imagination run. Besides, he might have forgotten. To keep the magic alive, I don’t play the game anymore. There are always exceptions.

He gave me a Cracker Jack box. I spilled the content, thus earned the “clumsy” label from him. I concurred with the label to play along, but did not consider myself a clumsy person. It bothered me a little bit that he thought I was clumsy, even if he was just teasing.

Maybe we talked math. Maybe we talked about my boyfriend. Maybe we talked about my coming over to America. Maybe he asked for my driver license after my dumping the Cracker Jack content. Maybe it does not matter that I do not remember what we talked about or the order of events on the train. It must have been drunkenness. I was not the shy girl I really was. And I was glad he was with me. I had no idea what I’d have done for dinner. He took me to the dining car. As I followed him around a corner, I was somewhat self-conscious of our height difference. I ordered a prime rib. His treat. It was to be my Christmas present for Christmas was just a few days away. I normally liked fatty cuts of meat, but my prime rib was too fatty, I thought. Being diplomatic I was not, I let him know. He still remembers this.

We went back to the dome car after dinner. Now my memories have him sitting next to the window and me at the aisle, on the right side of the train. We must have spent the whole day together. He leaned back and closed his eyes. I thought he was forward when he told me to put my head on his shoulders. He must not have behaved his usual ways either because I don’t really think of him as a forward person. I wanted to be with him then, but I was not about to put my head on a stranger’s shoulders. I felt awkward and did not want to go to sleep next to him, with or without my head on his shoulders. As he fell asleep, I slunk back to my assigned seat.

We got back to each other the next day. At some point we were at the area of my assigned seat. The lady who sat next to me referred to him as my boyfriend. I tried to correct her to no avail. She offered her seat to him.

He gave me his address. It was not a time of cell phones, emails, or instant messages. To correspond, we’d have to write and send letters by putting stamps on envelopes. It was I who would have to write first if I wanted to maintain our friendship. I was about to transfer to a university and I did not have an address.

He was going to Tampa to spend Christmas with his maternal grandmother. I was going to Ocala to see my aunt and cousins. Our train split. I was the one who had to get off. As I was getting off, I gave him a hand squeeze. Touch is in my nature.
As I stood on the platform, he took a photo of me.
I stood and watched the train that carried him leave, craving for him to turn his head once more my way.

I was the one who wrote first. He said in his first letter that he’d be “honored” to be my boyfriend. It was flattering. But my then-boyfriend followed me to the university. And I was still self-conscious about our height difference. But my heart leapt whenever I got a letter from him. For Valentine’s Day, he sent me a stamped, unwrapped baseball. He wrote on it in pink letters “Be my valentine.” He put a 28-cent stamp on it and the post office delivered. I still have it.
It was several months before I parted with my then-boyfriend. It was not because of him. But my heart was free and open.
I finally gave him the “honor” he asked for.

Three years later, we tied the knots. He said our fate was sealed with the hand squeeze three years earlier. But perhaps our fate was sealed when I had to take the chemistry final at the end of the first half of my sophomore year. For you see, my cousin drove his roommate and my sister to Ocala to spend Christmas with his family. I wanted very badly to go with them, but I had to stay behind to take the chemistry final. If I had been a better student, I probably could have had taken the final early and be done with it.
And as fate had it, I was not a better student.




Saturday, February 23, 2013

My Head Had Spoken


My father passed away seven years ago this month. I spoke these words at his funeral. I miss him and wish he had a chance to meet his first great-grandson. 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~




There lay my father, asleep or resting, on the hospital ICU bed.  The doctor spoke.  She wanted to know our wishes if his heart ever would fail to beat.  The doctor at the previous hospital prior to his transfer here had asked my brother the same question.  The doctor phrased it in the way such that we knew what she thought we should do, based on her medical expertise, as a doctor to the family of a patient.  My sister thought her speech was slanted.  My older brother who is a medical doctor himself told us that the doctor spoke with statistics and experience.  The odds stacked up against my father, heavily.

My father had suffered a prolonged period of reduced blood flow to his vital organs.  His aneurysm ruptured the day before.  We were warned about all possible complications and consequences, and it was too early to tell the extent of any damages.  

We were told my father’s only chance of survival that day was an operation to relieve the pressure that had built up and interfered with his bodily functions.  We consented.  My mother was exhausted, physically and emotionally, and had delegated the decision making on the five of us.  The operation lasted under two hours.  My father pulled through.  He was stable enough that my mother went home to rest.  His conditions remained stable throughout the evening and the night.

In the morning, the doctor called.  We consented to a dialysis and hurried to the hospital.  Then we were told the blood pressure had gone down between the doctor’s call and our arrival and the dialysis could not be performed.  My medical brother looked at the monitor and thought my father would have about twenty minutes before his heart would stop.  This time, we had to make the hard decision of what to do in the event of a heart failure.  There was no time to waste.  My brother explained to us that we could only resuscitate the heart a few times, but in the end the heart would not come back.  My cousin in Arlington had miraculously arrived at the same moment.  We sent my husband out to get my niece.  We were there, crying together, while trying to figure what would be best for my father.  My sister was not quite ready to let go, but she went with the decision to let my father go in peace.  I definitely thought it was the reasonable thing to do, since we had been warned over and over about brain, liver, and kidney damages even if he was to survive.  But as if being comforted by an unexpected reunion with his wife, his five children, his son-in-law, his niece, and his nephew around him; my father refused to go.  His heart rate became steady, albeit weak, and his blood pressure steadily rose from the low 70’s to the mid 90’s.  At one point, it was 105, the minimum pressure required for dialysis.  With my father’s condition stabilized, some of us went home to rest.

Before we had a chance to come back to the hospital, my father’s condition worsened.  His heart rate became irregular again.  As soon as we heard that the EKG chart went flat, we piled into the cars and hurried to the hospital.  I thought we were too late to be there with him when he left our world, but he was the one with the last word.  I dropped my mother and two brothers off as I went to park.  As soon as my mother walked into the room, my father’s heart danced and the monitor picked up movements.  Then as I walked into the room a few minutes later, the same thing happened.  My sister and my husband were the last two to arrive before my father said goodbye for good.  There is no doubt in our minds that he waited for all of us to arrive.  He went peacefully, surrounded by loved ones. 

It has been six days since we said goodbye.  My head had spoken.  It was best for my father to go.  Then why is my heart so heavy?  I’m more in a daze now than when he was in the hospital.  His image appears frequently in my mind.  It was just three weeks ago that we celebrated Tet together and just two weeks ago that we gathered at my brother’s place for dinner.  My cousin was there at Tet celebration.  He and my father recounted their days in the North of Viet Nam where they were born.  I see my father now with his remembering how many “cay bang” at the village gate.  I could only imagine what it looked like.  Then I see him being somewhat unsteady with his steps, but taking the effort to come to my brother’s place in Falls Church.  I recall the phone calls with him when he thought the pharmacist had given him the wrong medicines, despite me telling him otherwise.  When he finally cleared everything with the pharmacist, he told me “You win,” with a chuckle, his way of saying “You were right.”  I thought he was silly of thinking of that as “winning” or “losing.”  But now his words sound so charming and loving, and I want to hear “You win” from him again.  Lately he didn’t give advice, but sometimes sought it.  I want to receive a phone call from him one more time.  He’d begin with “Ba co cai nay muon noi voi Tran,” which means “There is something I want to talk with you about.”  I would then say “Talk to me.  I have all the time in the world.” 

I’d like to thank all of you for taking time to be with us today.  I wish you all the time in the world to spend with your father, mother, and other family members.