
Ah, Only You
(My Muse, can create this) Frame of mind
A Christmas poem built on a single rhyme—words ending in "-ug"—that traces a path from childhood Santa fantasies to adult longing, stuffing a metaphorical stocking with hugs, eggnog chugs, a mug with her picture, a pug, a rug by the fire, and a snug grip of hands, before arriving at the confession that without the beloved's love, the speaker is just a Humbug, and that love is not a reward from Santa but a life journey to someone's arms.
This is one of Plahm’s most formally playful pieces—a poem whose entire architecture is determined by a single phoneme: “-ug.” The constraint is announced through practice rather than explanation: Hug, Chug, Dugout, Jug, Mug, Pug, Rug, Shrug, Slug, Smug, Snug, Snuggly, Ugh, Humbug. Fourteen “-ug” words form the poem’s spine, and each one becomes a miniature scene or observation that fills the Christmas stocking one gift at a time. The method is Oulipian—a formal constraint generating content—but the tone is pure Plahm: warm, comic, self-deprecating, and ultimately tender.
The preamble—”My mom and dad hung on the wall / Showed me… / The path…”—roots the poem in childhood memory: a stocking on a wall, parents who made Christmas magical, the path from childhood dream to adult reality. The ellipses suggest the path is not continuous but broken by time, by growing up, by the distance between Santa’s fantasy and what actually fills the stocking of an adult life.
Each “-ug” word is given just enough context to become a vignette: the Chug of eggnog is sensory (creamy, softening the palate); the Dugout is narrative (sneaking in to find the beloved, love as a hidden-base-stealing game); the Jug is emotional (full of happy thoughts); the Mug is the poem’s most touching detail—”with your picture, full of hot chocolate, / still warm from your hand.” The warmth is transferred from her hand to the mug to the chocolate to the speaker, a chain of conducted heat that is both physically accurate and emotionally precise.
The Pug—”to know what true beauty really is”—is a comic aside that works because pugs are simultaneously ugly and irresistible, and the suggestion that true beauty looks like a pug is both a joke and a philosophy. The Slug—”that creates the light it seeks”—is the poem’s most unexpected and most original image, referencing bioluminescent sea slugs and converting the humble gastropod into a metaphor for the poet: a slow, soft creature that generates its own illumination. The Shrug—”to gift the perfection of my ignorance”—is a Plahm specialty: admitting he doesn’t know what he’s doing and presenting the admission as a present.
The poem’s emotional pivot arrives with Ugh and Humbug: “Ugh I might just be— / a Humbug for Christmas / without your love / wrapped and bowed / in my arms and life.” The Dickens reference converts the speaker from romantic hero to Scrooge—a man who, without love, becomes the thing Christmas is supposed to cure. The closing breaks free of the “-ug” constraint entirely: “Love is not a reward from Santa. / It is a life journey / to someone’s arms and heart.” By dropping the rhyme scheme at the moment of deepest sincerity, the poem demonstrates that form serves feeling: the game was fun, the stocking was full, but the truth underneath doesn’t rhyme and doesn’t need to.
A poem that proves formal constraint can be a source of discovery rather than limitation. The “-ug” rhyme scheme is the kind of self-imposed rule that could easily produce doggerel, but Plahm navigates it by making each word a window rather than a punchline—the Mug is tender, the Slug is surprisingly deep, the Shrug is philosophically self-aware, the Dugout is playful narrative. The constraint generates images the poet wouldn’t have found without it: no one reaches for “slug that creates its own light” in a Christmas poem without the rhyme demanding it, and the image is the poem’s most original. The Mug stanza is the poem’s emotional high point—the transferred warmth from hand to ceramic to chocolate to speaker is a physical description of love’s conductivity that works beautifully. The preamble’s childhood-to-adulthood arc gives the stocking conceit its temporal weight: these aren’t random gifts but a developmental history, from the Santa fantasy of childhood to the real love of adulthood. The Humbug pivot is well-timed, arriving just when the “-ug” catalog risks becoming a list rather than a progression, and the Dickens reference earns its place. The closing’s abandonment of the rhyme scheme is the poem’s smartest structural choice: sincerity drops the game, and the final statement—love as journey, not reward—carries the gravity the playful form has been building toward. Where the poem is less successful is in the middle section’s pacing: some “-ug” words (Jug, Rug) receive slightly less imagistic development than others, and a few feel like they’re present because the rhyme demanded them rather than because they carry emotional freight. The “Love lost— / is devastating” line, while true, reads as a statement rather than an image, and the poem might have benefited from one more concrete “-ug” scene in place of the abstract declaration. But the overall effect—playful, warm, structurally inventive, emotionally honest at the close—is a Christmas poem that earns its stocking. A poem that proves the best gifts come in “-ug” shaped packages.
My mom and dad hung on the wall
Showed me…
The path…
from a childhood dream,
a Santa’s fantasy,
we all dreamed,
now realized
thru quirky thought
to adulthood.
A heartfelt
hug from your soul.
Is all I dream of.
A Chug of creamy eggnog softens my palate.
A Dugout hidden I sneak into to find you.
A Jug full of happy thoughts, filled with you.
A Mug with your picture,
full of hot chocolate,
still warm from your hand.
A Pug to know what true beauty really is.
A Rug to play on with you in front of the fire.
A Shrug to gift the perfection of my ignorance.
I’m a Slug that creates the light it seeks.
A Smug grin for wishful moments I strive to create.
A Snug grip, your hand in mine.
You are
my Snuggly path
to my Santa dream
come true.
Ugh
I might just be—
a Humbug for Christmas
without your love wrapped
and bowed in my arms and life.
Love is—
my realized path.
Love lost—
is devastating.
Love is not a reward
from Santa.
It is a life journey
to someone’s arms and heart.








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