We have our moments, you and I,
when we walk
on eggshells, sometimes on
an expanse of ice.
We deal with it,
masked with grimaces,
a moment fragile as porcelain, and then
it cracks and breaks.
I confess to all
my sins, and my
faux pas and silly mistakes.
There we are,
two sinners un-frozen,
and then, in
shimmering light, the
moon’s magnetism pulls us together, tight
in an unbroken lock,
cementing the embrace of
years. You smile and light up my
face.
Kim M. Russell, 24th June 2025

For this Tuesday’s Poetics at the dVerse Poets Pub we are building from the broken with Mish, our host, who tells us about her experience with kintsugi bowls, and how that philosophy relates to the theme of the upcoming dVerse anthology. She reminds us that kintsugi was first introduced by Grace in a haibun prompt in 2017.
We have been given the specific anthology sub-topics that inspired Mish’s prompt, and can choose one to inspire our poems, or we could also write about kintsugi. I decided to write a golden shovel from the individual perspective and love as a crossroad, by taking a couple of lines from a poem by one of my favourite poets, Carol Ann Duffy, entitled ‘Wintering’. The lines are:
‘I walk on ice, it grimaces, then breaks.
All my mistakes
are frozen in the tight lock of my face.’
That is the testament of a solid relationship. Love this part Kim:
shimmering light, the
moon’s magnetism pulls us together, tight
in an unbroken lock,
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Thank you so much, Grace.
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I love the way you describe the relationship, walking on eggshells and how it mends in the end… that is friendship I think
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Thanks Björn!
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Lovely! You describe so eloquently the way relationships and love sometimes need a bit of a “crack” once in awhile to open us up, see the light, confess, move on….
I especially love this….
“We deal with it,
masked with grimaces,
a moment fragile as porcelain..”
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Thank you so much, Mish.
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Yep, that seems to me how a marriage survives the longer haul – an lock made of faults held together by unseen magnetism weirdly unbreakable. Some dark lucent thing keeps saying yes. Well done, Kim. (Not linked to the challenge is a poem today I titled “Marital” along the same moonlit seams.)
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Thank you, Brendan. I’ll check your poem out.
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No relationship survives without mended cracks. Well done Kim.
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Thanks! Some relationships can be hard work.
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Indeed! I’m still working on the one with my sister, even though she passed away. Compassion.
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I love the last sentence in your poem:
You smile and light up myface.
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Thank you, Nolcha.
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A really great poem, Kim. I love the story you weave between the words of your poem! Well done!!
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Thanks Dwight!
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In the ‘right’ or ‘best’ relationship, I can feel this. My wife and I barely ever talk about the times that we snapped, there’s nothing in it to actually resolve. We accept that we our foibles, or moments of explosion because we know that they are brief outbursts and they will pass.
In previous, ‘not quite right’, relationships these events may have been enough to break up over.
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Same here, Shaun.
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luv the tension the confession and the mending
all too often it is a scene of pointingvthe finger, but here is the acknowledement of imperfection knowing and striving for better
luv it
much♡love
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Thank you, Gillena.
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I think every sad poem is, in a way, bringing together those broken parts of ourselves to create a beautiful whole.
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“You smile and light up my
face.”
A beautiful love poem, Kim. I’m pleased to read it on my own wedding anniversary.
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Thank you, Merril! Happy anniversary again!
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You’re welcome, Kim! 💙
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Beautiful Kim, I love how it captures the cycles of tension, confession, and reconciliation with such honesty 💕
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Thank you!
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You are very welcome
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All of us whose relationships have lasted for 40 years plus will recognise the sentiments you outline so beautifully here Kim and it is quite some time since we have had sins to confess but I love “cementing the embrace of
years”…
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Thank you, Andrew
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Hi Kim,
I love this line, “There we are, / two sinners un-frozen”. I like that it does not let anyone off the hook. Very nice. Thank you for posting your poem. -a.
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Thank you for reading, Aaron, and for your kind comments.
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Your poem is one I can relate to, Kim. Beautiful.
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Thank you, Jennifer.
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“cementing the embrace of years”
Beautiful, Kim!
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Thank you, Sara!
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This is lovely, simply lovely. Your description of the tension is ‘spot on’.
“a moment fragile as porcelain, and then
it cracks and breaks”
And the resolution is so recognizable, too.
I’ve been married a long time, and this is a perfect description of how the infrequent skirmishes unfold.
Just gotta love a poem that you can wear like a favorite old sweater.
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Thanks so much, Kim, for your appreciation.
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This is so healing..that one can confess and forgive and repair and move on – should be the way!
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Thank you, Rajani.
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