Finding New Meaning in the Familiar
----------------------------------------------
Cindy Adcock
Macey-dog and I were approaching
the usual group of middle school students
waiting for their bus to arrive
waiting for us to draw near
waiting with the familiar clamor of enthusiastic
voices
“so pretty…
“her name…
“is she…
“look at…
“black…
“does she…
“beautiful…
“Macey,
you’re cool…
Waiting for their bus to arrive
Waiting for use to draw near
Waiting with an unfamiliar jumble of painful memories
“I wish my
dog still lived with me…
“she was the
best…
“I miss him…
“he was cool…
“she slept
on my bed…
“I only see
him once a week…
“she was my
friend…
“but when
they split up, my dog went with him…
“I live with
my Dad, but she kept our dog…
“they
weren’t thinking about how I’d feel…
It was the first time, I swear,
That they had ever shared their pain of childhood
divorce.
Except one boy, dog-less no doubt, sidled up to me and
whispered
“I have to
repeat seventh grade because I don’t know how to read.”
It was the first time, I swear,
That he had even shared his shame of failure.
And when I remember their pain, his shame, I want, I
swear, to cry.
What
Can I Do?
----------------------------------------------
Cathi Arcuri
Van-accessible
parking space for me, what a journey that set me on.
What
can I do?
That
lonely tree is permanently parked right next to the accessible parking space.
What
can I do?
Too
many roots to plant anything, watching the weeds get higher and higher at every
exit of my van.
Every
time I saw that lonely tree all by itself, with no one to love or notice that a
tree was even there.
With
its beautiful canopy that protects me when I enter and exit my van.
What
can I do?
Then
I saw a post about a rock garden. Ah, that is what that tree needed.
That’s
what I can do.
That
is how the Art Rock Garden under the Kindness Tree on South Main Street began.
Share Kindness Always:)
“Don’t Give Up”, 2026
----------------------------------
Willis
Beck
“Don’t Give Up” is my
message this year:
I’ll say it again while I have your ear.
You’ve come so far, don’t
drop the ball;
Life’s treasure awaits, don’t lose it all.
Eat well, sleep well, do
exercise;
Praise God for good health and sunny skies.
Greet your neighbors,
love your friends,
Approach your foes, to make amends.
God has blessed me with
ninety years plus;
Children, grands, greats, great-greats would fill a bus!
I have seen so much and
done it all well,
I remember most of it, clear as a bell!
Don’t Give Up” I’ll say
it one more;
Remember my plea as you approach the door.
---------------------------------- Honorable Mention
Catherine
Cassara
My father had to pick up the pieces of his brother’s
life
dealt with a closet full of toilet paper, a bucket of
nail clippers, and taxes for years
Ten years later my sister is still unraveling the
threads and picking up pieces of our parents’ lives
A friend still crosses the ocean several times a year
to work on untangling her mother’s life, thinning out the possessions, and
unraveling her love’s life, piece by piece
So I could not then leave an overflowing home for fr
my niece to deal with?
Half a country away, how could she deal with thousands
of books, a basement full of all sorts, and closets full of the ephemera of my
life
It made so much sense to take on the task myself, a
gift my family might never know I tackled for them
Not that I expect them to be faced with the chore
tomorrow, but the very unknowing matters
Cookbooks unused with the advent of the web, were easy
to shed
The army of tired, sad, dusty tomes have gone the way
of the bookcases that housed them
Precious books the scaffolding of my life, at work and
at home, were a heavy burden but once the boxes were formed and filled,
momentum took over
Cloth I never actually sewed was easily gifted away,
clothes from the dog who needed them took several years to find new homes, but
they have
The dishes that I have never used that fill china
cabinets I never needed, are still a task ahead
But now I am frozen
On the bottom shelves of bookcases, on the bottom of
the boxes of things that mattered in closets, in tubs in the basement, I found
more pictures than I can count or know how to deal with
Easy to say if I don’t look at them I don’t need them
but the pictures take me to places in my life that are
not so easy to shed, there are no organizing structures, no labels, no
illusions that anyone beyond me would care about or need them
But they take me to places and times that are hard to
leave behind and they take me places no one else can go
I always planned to return
----------------------------------
Catherine Cassara
It hangs on the fridge
A peaceful picture of the
other place
Where my heart returns
Bougainvillea green and
purple on the wall
A home filled with people
People I love, people I
always planned to see again
Now the picture hangs on
the fridge
Near another of two who
live there and love
I left, always planning
to return
But life had other plans
But now I realize North
Africa is only half a world away
And I can still return
Not how and when I
thought I would, but still possible
Second Glances
----------------------------------
Lisa C. Chavers
Wait a minute! What did I just see over there??
Let me take a second look,
That is not cheating. It is only fair!
Did I see what I think I saw?
Let me shift my angle and look again;
That’s acceptable in this case, it is not sin.
Though sometimes it is best to leave well enough alone
Or else, a second glance will get me caught in some
unnecessary stuff.
Once, Jesus had a two-part healing experience with a
blind man (Mark 8:24)
He touched him once and then he touched him once
again.
The first time, the blink man glanced and se men
walking as trees
The second time his vision was fully restored! He was
thankful and was deeply pleased!
Personally, second glances can confirm a questionable
matter.
At first glance may be puzzling and cause thoughts to
scatter.
Pause a moment! What did I just see over there?
Was the object long, circular or square?
It is something beautiful, unique, captivating, and
rare!
I will try my very best not to stare.
But I will cast a second curious glare.
OH TAKE ME HOME!!
----------------------------------
Melissa Collingwood
Oh take me home
To where I belong,
Oceans, Cities, and Mountains, too
Great Bear Coffee and friends like
you.
A day in Carmel
With the trees so distant
A Pathway to Dolores
The shops line the streets.
Let’s go to Tiburon and eat at Sam’s
Will sit outside among the birds
San Francisco in the distance
Where my Heart comes home
The Golden Mountain side and Sunny
Skies
As nighttime comes the Bay brings
chills
The moon is bright as it rises
Oh please take me home for the
thrills
We will go to San Francisco, it is
not too far
Will park and take the cable car
Painted Ladies on a slant, and the
slow
Drive down a crooked street.
The Golden Gate so regal and strong
Sways and connects the land where I
belong
Marin & Bonlinas, Belvedere &
Mill Valley
These are the Towns I grew up with,
my galley.
I worked in the Valley and learned
all the tech.
Silicon Chips and coding to do
Computers to create and Software to
check
Working on Campus at Apple too
Los Gatos my home in the hills I so
love
Looking over the city so high above
Winding my way to Santa Cruz
On Highway 17, oh look at the views.
The Whales how they frolic from unto
the sea
They’re waiting for me, the Humpbacks
you see
Breaching and diving so elegantly
The Gentle Giants of the sea.
Oh please take me home,
To the place where I belong…
45 Year Old Paper
----------------------------------Runner Up
Joseph DeMare
A pink and black cardboard box
once filled with wine
wrapped with shiny plastic tape
corners crumpled from many moves
Now filled with 45 year old papers.
A mix of taxes and folders
Comics and music books and
Literary magazines made by my friends
and me. Yellowed newsprint filled
with poetry, pretty photography, and
hope.
With names like “Orpheus” and “Nexus”
Their words leap off the page at me
Freed from 45 years of sleeping
My own Eurydice
Wasted away years ago
by her own cells gone awry
Whispers to me again of
“red cream soda kisses” and
how she prefers
“jam on bread to paper.”
Mesmermorial
----------------------------------
Joseph DeMare
It was the place where she sat,
watching.
Comfortable recliner,
beige corduroy, buried under colorful
blankets and quilts
crushed by her slight weight
after years of watching, staring
occasionally smiling, rarely
laughing.
As the never ending parade of made up
faces
streamed past and over her
talking about the weather
floods, famine, wars, sex, and
selling
little plastic animals with googly
eyes
whose black plastic irises
rolled back and forth whenever
she opened the refrigerator door
to get some ham or turkey
sliced thin, stuffed with chemicals
to sustain her so she could
return to her sagging recliner
and resume watching,
as the years streamed past
Life
is good…
----------------------------------
Susan
Eisenbrandt
Life
is good.
Life
is bad.
Life
makes us who we are.
Life
make us remember who we were.
Life
reminds us on who we can be
Life
honors our past and also our dreams
Life-the
good, bad, ugly and happiness
Life
ends up into the belief of all aspects of life.
I
saw a rainbow
----------------------------------
Susan Eisenbrandt
I saw a rainbow. Thought about the
pot
of gold at the end.
I saw a rainbow and made a wish
of
blessings to all instead of the
pot
of gold.
I saw a rainbow and thought about
all
the colors and the meanings of
each
color.
I saw a rainbow and put my dreams
and
wishes into each color.
I saw a rainbow which each color put
into
dreams,
hope and happiness to all.
I saw a rainbow
Do You Want to Glow?
----------------------------------
Barbara Gould
Whats old is new and Whats new is old
Confusing thoughts from Prophets are
often told
But even though we are old, we meet
someone
and to them we are like a flower
New friends bring new joys and often
a
new
set of values, its not dour
These new friends heighten our
awareness of life
and often make us familiar with old
buried
happiness,
not strife
But often we still need the spark
that familiar friends and memories
give us,
its
not dark
Never bury the treasured happy times
with new and exciting climbs
Maybe we need to take a break and
dwell
on some of the most momentous events
like
graduations,
weddings, vacations that ring a bell
Yes, we’re sparking good thoughts and
show
that these happy events make us glow.
Puffins Are Fun Birds
----------------------------------
Barbara Gould
Whats that bird? He look so great
It’s so cold, is freezing its fate?
No I’m proud to say, That’s a Puffin
It’s sleeping, so he looks like a muffin
There’s more fun stuff to tell
Like they fly to find some food
A colorful fish to them is good
Just think, on a bright sunny day
Puffins always take time to play
Even though its so icy cold
They chase around, but stay with the fold
You may ask. Where do they build their nest?
Usually a flat rock is best.
The flock life in the snow
But they fly wherever they want to go
A hungry bird will fly and fly
To catch a fish swimming by
Then diving down, like a rocket
The fish is dinner in his pocket
We see why he has a huge beak
He’s hiding his food in his cheek
You may ask. Who feeds the babies
when
they cry?
Mom and Dad team up and both try,
To spear that fish swimming by.
Ten Months Later 1 Winning Poems
----------------------------------
Geoff Howes
still sitting by a bookcase in the back room
that Record Store Day tote bag
with green and red grooves
inside it a Funko Pop Space Ghost
a Mattel John Centa figurine
a small black plastic bag of
Christmas and birthday cards
mostly from your mother
some polaroids of a onetime couple
two or three old wedding invitations
a little damroo drum, red and green and yellow
the Lucky Peach Chicken Issue
the Batman Returns 30th anniversary issue
a Diesel Sweeties treasury
propped next to the tote
a large white envelope
from Job and Family Services
containing a Medicaid self-employment ledger
unfilled out
Ten Months later 2
----------------------------------
Geoff Howes
your life is like
a velvetleaf plant
with bud flowers
and dried pods
all visible
on one stem.
I Never Thought…
----------------------------------
Dan Mellen
I never thought, I’d end up here,
Growing up in Illinois,
The map in my head pointed.
elsewhere,
The future unclear and far away.
Love brought me here,
To a place I never planned,
And when the moment came to leave,
I stayed.
Not out of fear but because my life
had roots now.
Time has marked me.
I am older. Cancer has possessed my
body and left it lessons behind.
So I keep busy-
With “The Center”,
With my arts,
With my faith.
My love is still beside me.
That alone feels like grace.
After all the miles, the years, the
tests-
I must be doing something right.
Divine Transformation
----------------------------------Honorable Mention
Dan Mellen
There once was a man from
Bowling Green.
Who was REALLY REALLY
MEAN.
One night he lost an
awful fight.
Now he follow the HOLY
LIGHT.
Life’s Carousel
----------------------------------
Sheila Meyer
Revolving under the
bright blue sky
Shiny horses painted as
regal rides
Proud and gallantly sit I
Unaware, of the world’s
changing tides
As years evolve, and
times they change
It seems those horses,
surely know
Life is left to rearrange
That child, that sat with
happy glow
The ride is slowing,
afterall these years
That child has grown, and
life goes on
Through life’s journey,
of laughter and tears
The carousel, has stopped
at dawn.
Rag-A-Muffin
----------------------------------
Sheila Meyer
She came to me, a shy
little miss
Afraid of the world, and
every second
Wondering myself, “Can I
fix this?”
Adapting my life, in the
all around
Seems that she had been
cast out
Never to enjoy the puppy
life for certain
Determination was what I
was about
Her little life, not the
final curtain.
She gets the queen
treatment I guarantee
That pup has truly stolen
my heart
Now her happiness is left
to me
She remains right here,
never to part
Awakening
----------------------------------
Kristina Nelson
An unexpected moment in time, gave us a gift,
As the last young adult prepared, leaving into the
world fast and swift.
Childhood years buzzed with care, worry, and all that
Mom and Dads do,
Suddenly there were no shouts, fights, slamming doors,
or trips to the zoo.
Instead of feeling lost as some parents do,
The empty next was not a sourful end to stew.
The existence of marriage, habitually neglected,
Epiphany stunned us, and the truth connected.
Wrongly assuming marriage donned an active shelf life.
We hit the ground running, recharged as husband and
wife.
Rebooting every hour, every day, of everything
ordinary.
Adventuring, appreciating fully, life became
extraordinary.
Instantly, with zip back in our sap, relishing moments
of being.
How did we ever let busyness keep us from seeing?
Newly unfolding each beautiful day,
Intro unforgettable minutes, no longer wasted away
Instead of feeling lost as some parents do,
The empty next was not a sourful end to stew.
The existence of marriage, habitually neglected,
Epiphany stunned us, and the truth connected.
Wrongly assuming marriage donned an active shelf life.
We hit the ground running, recharged as husband and
wife.
Rebooting every hour, every day, of everything
ordinary.
Adventuring, appreciating fully, life became
extraordinary.
Instantly, with zip back in our sap, relishing moments
of being.
How did we ever let busyness keep us from seeing?
Newly unfolding each beautiful day,
Intro unforgettable minutes, no longer wasted away
Now I glance, and glance around again,
in life’s final years.”
----------------------------------
David J. Neuendorff
There was a time, now so
very long ago.
When just a glance
stirred a primordial soul.
Was it a pretty smile, or
an interesting face?
That turn of a head, that
one’s fancies graced.
Then even the sense of an
new adventure possible,
Would redirect my journey
down that interesting path.
A thought, a dream
appearing during a fitful slumber,
Stirred the imagination
of life’s promises, yet fulfilled.
That glance at a
possibility, sought once it appeared.
A glance and the
flirtatious dance that then ensued.
In my youth, and vigor,
not yet chastened by experience.
Full of promise, but only
fulfilled if ardently pursued.
And now one remembers,
the energy and sensations fondly,
Though the energy to
proceed with abandon, has vaporized.
And though a second
glance, yet occasionally, still appears,
Primordial thoughts and
desires are now all left unrealized.
The Belt of Venus
----------------------------------
Stephen Petersen
He spins 180° and isn’t
disappointed.
He talks about it to his
friends but sounds a bit disjointed.
“Look there,” he cries,
“beneath the orange and peach.
The gray band grows as
sunset flows.
With clouds it’s out of
reach!”
For him flat-earthers
have become the object of great mirth,
Because the Belt of Venus
is the shadow of Earth.
My Porch Swing
----------------------------------Honorable Mention
Stephen Petersen
As I kick back, my porch swing swings.
I gaze around at everything.
Since spring draws near, I smell the earth.
I breathe it in for all I’m worth.
This false spring fools a willing fool.
The city crush is far behind.
There’s nothing left to try my mind.
I breath in sweetly. Deep and slow.
And far away my worries go.
The swing swings on as my thought flow
As I swing gently to and fro.
Swaying gently, to and fro,
I watch the sunset’s orangey glow.
The birds give feeders one last fling.
As pale blue shades bring evening.
I push once more, rock to and fro
And wander where my thought may go.
My
Favorite Place
---------------------------------- Honorable Mention
Carole
Rinehart
It was like a dream,
sitting on the deck of my waterfront cottage
at the lake, blissfully
alone, loving the peace and quiet. On the weekend, though,
I was blessed to have the
company of children, grandchildren, friends and
neighbors, enjoying the
cottage and all the toys. We had boats and jet skis,
tree swings, a hot tub
and more.
Through the years, as the
toys deteriorated, they were not replaced, because
Grandchildren grew up and
moved away, friends went to nursing homes or passed
away and visits to the
cottage became less and less.
My last visit this fall
was a wakeup call. There were overgrown weeds, bees
Swarming, a deck that
needed painting, and for the first time in twenty five
years, a mouse.
I will soon put a for
sale sign on my favorite place, and it will become
a younger person’s dream.
THE
QUARTERBACK STANDS ALONE
----------------------------------
Carole
Reinhart
An injured quarterback. A freshman stepped up. Broke a
record for passing,
gained yardage as a
keeper. Ran for touchdowns. Small colleges talking, bigger colleges watching.
Now a sophomore, one loss, two wins. The quarterback
stands alone,
congratulated on a victory, passes caught, yardage
gained, runs for
touchdowns.
But not tonight. Tonight a pass was intercepted.
Tonight a pass is too low.
Tonight a keeper barely gains a few yards. Go in at
half time with a one
point lead. Come out against a fired up team.
Eleven on defense can’t hold them. Ten on offense
can’t make a space for the
quarterback to pass or run. Plays called just don’t
work.
Tonight the quarterback stands alone. The wins are
largely credited to him,
so of course a loss is charged against him. He is
devastated.
Still, he came out to greet his family and stood tall.
He is a sixteen year old quarterback.
Haiku
Poems
----------------------------------
Clarissa
Reinherd-Zender
Spring Time
The Bees are
buzzing
Flowers blooming
everywhere
With sunshine and
rain
The Hunted
Graceful leaps the
deer
With the sound of
guns nearby-
Running from
hunters
Change of Seasons
The leaves are
falling
Geese are flying
toward the south-
Soon will be
winter
Jerusalem
----------------------------------
David Vaughn
Who is looking at your life to say
‘this you should have done not that
Your happiness was mine to give but
you must meet criteria?’
The voice that drives you in concern
to bow and scrape before the King
Is the sceptre you first kissed when
you despaired of freedom.
And Freedom has based from this realm
to fight for Old Jerusalem
Not for any purpose else but to fight
for its lost Kingdom in the past.
To know a thing as surely as it can
be known
Is to have an acre in your name
somewhere in the world
where no king goes and no priest
passes.
If this does not suffice for
happiness then to dies for some crusade no matter how unworthy
Will surely be the best that you can
do.
While your children will be playing
in the field careless of the father’s fallen glory.
No one can stay where they are.
No one can build a wall around a
moment.
All that you have you have
derivatively,
And while the child wants to be
happy, the adult wants to be right-
The stories of your house have naught
but broken stairs.
But your hope lies still in this- the
child wants to be happy.
The adult must learn to make repairs.
And you are not the Child and you are
not the Adult.
You are the adult-child and the
child-adult
And your purpose here is to be
defeated again and again,
Carried from the field of battle
until the light begins to dawn somewhere in your darkened vision.
Autumn Run
----------------------------------
David Vaughn
Feet being led over the
autumn ground, the will pounding, pounding in my feet.
first leaves decaying,
first joy going underneath the ground.
The grass is green but
dying.
The day is warm and
humid.
I sense through the
pounding of the blood, fresh blood in my veins,
a new awakening.
Joy is being purified
perfectly,
Impurity pushed out in
the tears of sweat.
Unhappiness has retired
from the effort to a cloistered corner of the mind
Where it reads an unloved
book of poetry.
It will not haunt my
weariness today.
And now the last mile
beginning.
There awaits only the
puzzled piece of glass pointing upward-
I am driving onward to
our rendezvous.
Then it slips through the
rubber sole and meets my foot.
Suddenly screams the
chorus of pain:
Then blood begins to flow
slowly, filling up my shoe, but slowly, and then slowly stops.
I pull the piece of glass
from my shoe, then try to run, then stop,
then walk the last mile
to the gym leaving little stains of blood upon the ground
and thinking, “This, too,
I knew would happen.”
The
Backward Look Says It All
----------------------------------
Karen
Wood
When you see a woman of a Certain Age,
know that her grandmother was born in a year when women could not vote in the
U.S.A.
When you note a Woman of a Certain Age,
remember that her high school did not offer girl’s sports and she could not
wear pants to school.
When you observe a Woman of a Certain Age,
realize that it’s true she could rob a bank and no one would be able to
identify the white-haired, non-descript granny.
When you see a Woman of a Certain Age,
understand that when the “Me Too” Movement hit the news, she had a personal
story to tell but no one cared to listen.
And finally, when you see a Woman of a
Certain Age, take a second glance, because what you are looking at is a Woman
of a Certain Rage.
A
FURTHER LOOK
----------------------------------
R.E.
Yanik
A
peaceful person is one who is prudent, has compassion and care for others, and
Is
respected, admired and befriended.
A
peaceful person is humble, moral, ethical, dignified, reasonable, and
Makes
positive worthy choices.
A
peaceful person recognizes those in need and extends a helping hand.
A
peaceful person imspires, forgives, understands and
Prays
for the well-being and good health of others.
A
peaceful person is moderate, serene, noncombative, and
An
observer of law and order.
At
second glance,
He
or she is someone with no puffery, no boasting,
no
lying, no exaggeration or self dealing.
He
or she is someone who does not seek retribution or
Use
inflammatory rhetoric or make derogatory comments directed
At
other people, organizations or countries of the world.
He
or she is not hostile, militant, or aggressive.
A
peaceful person is a model for inspiration, and
is
to be admired and cherished by humankind.
ALLURE:
HOW IT STARTS
----------------------------------
R.E.
Yanik
It
was her tone that he heard first
That
drew his attention.
The
lilt, the bliss, the warmth could not be denied
Magical!
He
felt uplifted just hearing her voice.
He
had to know, had to see.
Surreptitiously
he glanced her way.
He
turned, looked over at her.
Just
a quick glance he told himself.
Startled!
Surprised!
One
glance would not suffice.
A
second glance was a must.
He
was intrigued and interested.
His
thoughts fell away for just a moment as he gazed into her eyes.
She
smiled. The possibilities dangled.
The
connection was utterly wonderful.
He had to know her.
Our Sincere Gratitude
The
Wood County Committee on Aging extends our heartfelt gratitude to all who
supported our 2026 Poetry Contest, now proudly celebrating its 20th year.
We
would like to offer a special thank you to Bowling Green Manor for their
generous donation for the first-place award and to Wood Haven Health Care for
their generous donation for the runner-up award. Your support helps us continue
to celebrate creativity and community through the written word.
We
are also deeply appreciative of the professors and students from the College of
Arts and Sciences, English Department at Bowling Green State University for
their time, expertise, and thoughtful judging of this year’s contest. Your
involvement plays a vital role in making this event meaningful and successful.
Thank
you all for helping us honor the voices and talents in our community.

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