
Ah, Only You
(My Muse, can create this) Frame of mind
An origin story disguised as a love poem: the speaker recounts a specific Friday morning six years ago when he invited a woman to dinner, was rejected with professional grace, and walked away more alive than he had been in decades—a rejection that became the catalyst for his entire creative and emotional rebirth.
This is arguably the most autobiographically transparent poem in Plahm’s body of work, and its power lies precisely in that nakedness. The poem pins itself to an exact moment—”8:48 on the Friday morning / before Labor Day”—with the specificity of someone who has replayed it a thousand times. What unfolds is not a conventional love poem but an anti-love-story that becomes, paradoxically, the greatest love poem of all: the speaker asks a woman to dinner, she declines with the boundary “I won’t have a relationship with a client,” and he drives away ecstatic. The poem’s radical proposition is that rejection can be resurrection. The descending staircase of “my whole outlook, / my entire being, / my completely / dead / existence” uses line breaks as a controlled demolition, each step stripping away another layer until the word “dead” lands with full weight—only to be contradicted by everything that follows. The image of the “huge red morning sun” rising as the speaker walks out, then reappearing in his rear-view mirror as he drives away, creates a visual frame that transforms a mundane departure into mythic journey. The poem’s emotional honesty is startling: “Happier than I had been / in a decade or three / all from being / rejected.” The closing revelation—that being told “no” taught the speaker what his “yes” should be—elevates personal anecdote into universal wisdom about how the Muse often arrives through the door we least expect.
This poem functions as the Rosetta Stone for understanding Plahm’s entire body of work. Everything that follows in the HoneyBeeBard canon—the Muse mythology, the devotion to a smile, the recurring motif of transformation through encounter—traces back to this singular Friday morning. The specificity is its greatest asset: 8:48 a.m., the Friday before Labor Day, a stool behind a counter. These are not poetic inventions but memory anchors, and they give the poem an authority that abstraction never could. The emotional arc is masterfully counterintuitive: the speaker receives a rejection and responds with euphoria, and Plahm makes this paradox entirely believable through the accumulation of physical detail—the tingling, the rear-view mirror sun, the act of driving away. The poem’s most sophisticated move is the word “rewired,” appearing both in the bold subtitle and the closing philosophy. It reframes what could be a story of unrequited longing as one of neurological transformation—the Muse not as object of desire but as electrical current that jump-starts a dead existence. The escalating exclamation marks (“Tell me! / Tell me!! / Tell me!!!”) risk excess but ultimately serve the poem’s emotional logic: this is a man for whom restraint nearly proved fatal. The only minor weakness is occasional over-explanation—the poem sometimes tells us its meaning rather than trusting the imagery to carry it—but this is a small price for what amounts to Plahm’s most essential and revealing work.
A singular smile—
A moment of mine,
A smile of yours,
Mine and yours
Rewired
By a Smile
Do you know?
What you said?
Six years ago
at 8:48 on the Friday morning
before Labor Day?
I smiled, after inviting you out for dinner
over the holiday weekend,
only saying:
two people,
strangers,
with no one familiar—
alone for the weekend—
might enjoy an evening
of food and talk.
I walked out the door,
a changed person,
the huge red morning sun
was rising.
That simple moment
Changed my life,
my whole outlook,
my entire being,
my completely
dead
existence.
You said:
‘I won’t have a relationship with a client.’
Hahahaa
Still resonates.
And you had a perfect explanation.
I still vividly remember
smiling, being as gracious as possible,
walking out the door,
getting in the car,
and driving away
with the early morning sun
in my rear-view mirror—
amazingly tingling everywhere,
disappointed but
with something I hadn’t felt
in a long, long time—
absolute joy.
Happier than I had been
in a decade or three
all from being
rejected
by the most beautiful
smile I had ever witnessed,
sitting on a stool
behind a counter—
imaginatively competent.
Awesome!!
Simply awe
And more—
Awesome!!!!
I was so stupidly
happy.
Actually…
ecstatic.
Six years later
you haven’t changed,
no matter what
I’ve done.
You have no idea
how important
that singular moment
was
for me.
Freedom
And I
am still
enamored
with that
smile.
My life is now
alive,
authentic,
and connected.
Sometimes,
we need to be told
no
to realize what our
yes
should be
and be
rewired.
How is that?
for a perfect
moment?
Tell me!
Tell me!!
Tell me!!!
That light I saw—
at the end of the tunnel?
A reflection of my inner truth,
an external destination
I needed to find.
And found,
in my
Muse.
I am so
happy—
living your
singular smile.








The personal version: one of individual love. Lyric


CooooooooBaaaaaaaaa! Logically, Geographically, Culturally, Linguistically, Legally, Economically, Strategically,



Santa readies his sleigh, laden with gifts— and



You’re a good-looking woman. Terribly full of logic.




Barefoot at winter’s fading light, I dance—unrobed, unafraid.





Time The first fire. Is my friend And


Launched at 120425;3:26AM. I fell asleep dreaming peacefully



















Death—Rebirth Requiem—Resurrection Life—Forever The veil of life, lifted-








The Solitaire RazzleDazzleBerry on a Plate. A picture











Drunk— in misery and eternal sadness my life







After an excellent workout, the creative side overwhelms—






My Lovely Lady In your lovely ways, you










A deliciously delightful distraction of conversation for a



Note: this started with a conversation with my

What’s more exacting? The physical act of painting?














Burning Man The festival that embodies temporary community,



A Spiritual Tome following the Dance of the



















(Self-Portrait–A Veritable Fable) The HoneyBeeBard Always in search























A life-changing trip … A fifteen-minute read. From


A life-changing trip … A fifteen-minute read. From










My Personal Greek Tragedy Diamonds of Reflection (Prologue:
















Poetry Inspiration flows from every direction – sometimes





Dave’s Acronyms Akronyms. Akronomeous. Akrogreek, Akroignoramuse. Meaningless words,




Waiting to be explored That amazing sense of






Howdy! What’s on your mind? I had this


Very little food for two days Scared to

































A view of you Pleasing, pleasing, very pleasing
























