CWU
Monday, May 7, 2012
Fountain of Youth
Thursday, March 1, 2012
Needs a good title...
me. I was always connecting your heart to mine
with those two parallel lines
that represent an equals sign.
I never knew me to be dependent on your smile.
I was always denying that I loved you like a child
loves her blanket, lost so many years ago,
but now found again shoved into that narrow space
of barely existence where the mattress meets the wall.
I never knew that your hand held my breath
on the string of a kite that could yank in the wind and make my heart
catch. You’ve been reeling me in for some time
on your fishing line while I’ve been wallowing in my wishing mind,
pretending that we could somehow stay friends.
But days always seem to meet their ends
when the sunlight breaks and bends
at that narrow line of barely existence
where the ocean meets the sky.
I’m there, with my futile attempts to try
to save something good from something better.
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
My First Sestina
I remember sitting on your lap at home,
reading picture books, hand in hand.
I can see now that you were always leading me towards
something greater than yourself, so someday you could wave
goodbye, thinking about how much you love me from the doorway.
It’s always such a difficult thing to just stand by and watch.
I liked to help you pick out wristbands for your watches,
and go with you to Lowe’s where I could hide in the fake kitchens and play home.
You’d always find me, standing in the hollow doorways.
We’d laugh and smile and you’d take me by the hand,
and we’d leave happy. I’d wave
at the employees as we took each step towards
home. I like to live in these memories, but I can’t help look towards
the future. I can’t help but hear the ticking of your watch,
reminding me that someday I’ll watch you waving
as I leave the place that I call home.
I wonder how I’ll function without the comfort of your hand
each time I walk into a house that isn’t yours through a hollow doorway.
I like to still go to Lowe’s with you and hide in the doorways,
but now I see that people aim funny looks towards
us because we still leave hand in hand.
It’s funny how the older I get, the more people watch
us, but they no longer smile when I wave.
Sometimes I want to cry when I see you waving,
because I know that no one has ever loved me so much, watching me from a doorway.
I want to cry because I don’t like to leave you and my home.
I try to console myself, knowing that with each step I’m moving towards
an independent life, a successful life, but I wish you were here to watch
me grow. I wish you could be here to hold my hand.
Maybe I’ll find someone who will hold my hand
as well as you do, and it will look more appropriate so people will smile again when I wave.
Maybe I’ll help him pick out wristbands for his watches,
and hide in hollow doorways.
Maybe he and I will get to move together towards
that independent life, that successful life, and we can make our own home.
But for now I’m stuck watching you stand in the doorway,
with your slippers on, hand outstretched, waving,
as I drive towards a house that I refuse to call home.
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Just A Lil Bit of Poetry
Here's a roundel, a style of poetry I tried for fun: to challenge myself. (Sometimes using colons and semi-colons makes me feel pretentious.)
The World Does Not Care About Our Ego
Is it any wonder that we’ve fallen to our knees,
crying and moaning, twisting and turning, we’re burning
in this set world where nothing is ever what it seems?
Is it any wonder?
We’re mindlessly running after things that we’re yearning,
constantly fighting and biting for blurry old dreams,
as we try to forget that the pot just keeps churning.
We search for meaning in all of the world’s threads and seams,
trying to forget that after death it keeps turning,
trying to forget that life does not heed our screams.
Is it any wonder?
End
A prompt from poetry writing class. The title had to be in this format, and I chose the name Scarlett because it was the only person I can imagine asking me what a constellation is. It's supposed to be an extended metaphor. We had a list of words to choose from that we could describe.
In Answer to Scarlett’s Question, “What’s a Constellation?”
A constellation floats in the sky –
a kite whose string is attached to your eye,
a balloon that has slipped from a 12-year-old’s wrist.
She stands in the parking lot
watching it float higher into the black night.
Sometimes it’s golden or grey or has a faint tint of red.
Or sometimes it’s shy, ducking behind clouds that fly overhead.
Sometimes you see it, you know it, you can name it,
but sometimes it doesn’t make any sense.
It’s something you share with a father, a sister,
lying on the hard ground that’s cold and dimpled.
You’ll point with practiced eye,
but unless your companion stares down the line of your arm,
the pattern will be lost in the cluttered tangle of stars.
A constellation that floats in the sky.
End
I don't remember what I wrote this for.
L.O.V.E.
I was pulling darkness out of holes for years,
trying to find something to hold onto.
I was always talking about changing
before I realized what your name could mean.
You put some life into me,
and slowly set me free by placing tears on my cheeks
and smiles where doubt used to be.
I’m not hopping over cracks in sidewalks
pr counting down the steps to my defeat,
now that I know what your name means.
I didn’t know that I could breathe
before you pulled me from the holes-
from the darkness that I couldn’t hold.
I didn’t know that I was you,
or you were me,
until I wrote your name down:
L. O. V. E.
End
Friday, November 4, 2011
Do everything you can possibly do, and then some.
She sits there under the stars wondering when she’ll ever truly be happy. She isn’t now, nor has she ever been, and she doesn’t know why. Why does the moon in a cool night sky make her want to cry, to lie down on her face and pray to the heavens for love, though she doesn’t believe in God? Why does the sun rising over the hillside make her feel like she’ll always have more to do, to see, to love? Why? Why does the earth make her feel so peaceful, yet so afraid, like there are not enough hours in the day? “Where does the time go,” she wonders. “Where does my life go?” But maybe it’s a good thing. Maybe the fear that she’ll never do enough, never feel enough, never be enough will make her good enough. Maybe she will someday be strong enough to look out over a vast field of blooming flowers and feel as though her life is complete. Maybe someday she will feel loved, or maybe she won’t, but it won’t matter, because all that matters is that there’s enough time left in the day.
And maybe, after everything, she was always happy, and that’s why she cried.
Friday, June 10, 2011
Runaway A
On a Thursday morning in early February, Braden woke up with a secret. His mother hadn’t come in to tell him to get ready yet; instead, his anticipation had woken him early. As he crept from his bed, the chill air of his bedroom raised goose bumps along the bare skin of his gangly arms and legs. The sun had barely risen and was just beginning to peep through the edges of the blinds that covered his window, turning the room a cool blue.
At breakfast his mother noticed his strange mood.
“Stop rapping your fingers,” she said sternly, watching him out of the corner of her eye as she stood at the stove frying eggs. “You’ll bug your father. He’s working.”
Why does she always say that? He wondered silently.
She placed the eggs and toast before him, analyzing his face as he devoured the food. He didn’t think he’d be hungry today, but the combination of excitement and terror amplified his appetite rather than squandered it. She didn’t say anything else to him that morning, and he tapped his foot impatiently as she gathered his jacket, his backpack, and his mittens before leading him out the door. Once he had detangled himself from the grip of her morning hug, he bolted from the front porch and sprinted to school along the frosty sidewalks. In his hurry, he forgot to dodge the drops of water that plunged from the treetops onto his hair instead of his hood, which hung wrinkled and forgotten on his shoulders.
Back at the house, his father Jim sat in his study smoking as he stared out the window at nothing. A large manuscript sat on the desk in front of him which he looked at for a second as he ground his cigarette into an ash tray. He shook his head in defeat before lighting up another cigarette and stuffing the manuscript into his briefcase. On his way out of the house, he stopped at the kitchen leaning on the archway.
“I’m heading to work,” he said, hoping his wife would look up from the dishes she was scrubbing at the sink.
“Have a good one,” was all she said. He watched her reach under the sink to get more dish soap, but she didn’t turn around.
“We can make this work,” was the only thing he wanted to say to her, but the words wouldn’t pass his lips. “No,” he kept thinking. “She can make it work. I can’t. I have too much on my plate.” Once in the car, he tried to justify his marital problems.
“Work is a pain in my ass, and Debbie just gets too upset about it. Really, what does she expect when I’m the only one making money? For life to be easy? For me to have time to pay the bills and be romantic at the same time? I’m not Superman, god damn it. God fucking damn it!” When he arrived at the editing firm that he worked at, he was so stressed out about his job and his wife that he forgot to worry about his son.
Braden got to school early and sat before the set of double doors leading into the front hallway, biting his lip in frustration. The other kids were cherishing their moments on the playground, swinging from monkey bars and swirling on tire swings while he sat alone, his cold hands shoved into his coat pockets as he stared fervently at the clock he could see through a classroom window.
Five more minutes.
Two more minutes.
Just one minute!
5, 4, 3, 2, 1…
The bell situated above his head blared across the playground summoning the bodies toward the red brick building. Braden stood up hastily, brushed dust and rocks from his pants, and followed the playground monitor in through the doors surrounded by a buzzing hum of chatter. But his excruciating wait wasn’t over. Mrs. Sanders took her sweet time handing out the math assignment, scheduling the silent reading hour, and letting the fourth grade class work on their map project. Braden not only had to wait through first recess, but then lunch, and again through the second playground excursion. He had to suffer through fitness class and music class and through Mrs. Sanders’ explanation of how a light bulb works. While the other students experimented with Double A batteries and neon colored wires, he sat tracing his finger along the lines that students had carved into the piss-colored desk years before him. In the top right hand corner, scrawled in bad handwriting and black ink, the phrase, “Hilary sucks,” stared back at him. He saw this message every day, and every time it took him back to the first week of fourth grade on the playground. A group of ten students had surrounded him and his only friend Kyle in the corner by the basketball hoops.
They chanted, “Braden sucks! Braden sucks! Braden sucks!” over and over while they stomped on his collection of baseball cards. He didn’t notice Kyle laughing with them until the playground monitor sent the group away and Kyle went with them.
A week later, as he lay in bed with the covers up to his nose, he could hear the familiar sound of rushing water as his mother finished cleaning the kitchen. His eyes were beginning to droop when her voice brought him back to attention.
“Braden’s principal called today.”
“Hmm?” his father asked.
“She wants us to go in for a conference concerning bullying. When can you take time off work? She said she could do a weekend if she had to.”
“Can’t you just go?” There was silence. Braden’s lip stung as he realized he was biting it, so he pulled his teddy bear, the one he continuously claimed to be too old for, out of its hiding place between his bed and the wall, chomping down on its arm instead.
“I’m not going alone, Jim,” his mother finally said. Braden could hear her turning off the sink.
“Debby, you know I don’t have time. Why don’t you go and talk to the lady, and if it’s something serious then I can see when I’m available. But it just sounds like some overly-concerned principal with too much time on her hands has got her panties in bunch over some annoying little kids that she can’t control. She wants us to come and listen to her rant about how parents these days aren’t doing enough to raise their kids correctly.” After he had said it, Jim immediately regretted his words.
“Did I really just say she had her panties in a bunch?” he wondered silently. “Debby’s gonna flip a bitch.” But he kept his face set so she wouldn’t know he was sorry. He was too stubborn to give her any victories.
“It’s obvious some parents don’t know how to raise a child,” she said coldly. Braden heard her footsteps move from the kitchen to the bedroom and then the sound of a chair scraping against the linoleum followed by his father’s footsteps going into the study. Tears slipped from Braden’s eyes as he turned onto his side and buried his face into Teddy’s neck.
At 2:50, Braden realized he hadn’t been paying attention to anything in the classroom. He now watched as Mrs. Sanders walked over to her desk and pulled out a stack of official looking papers. The smart girls that sat behind Braden giggled and a few people groaned, but Braden jolted up in his seat and gripped the edges of his desk, his knuckles shining like ice sculptures while Mrs. Sanders handed the papers out one by one in alphabetical order.
She finally made it to his desk as the bell sounded, and the students began clambering into the hallways, some downcast, some bubbling, and some unaffected by what they had just received. The teacher looked down at Braden as she handed him the report card.
“I’m really proud of you,” she said, her voice soft with pleasure.
Braden unfolded the document to see a column of A’s staring back at him. Without a word or a smile for his teacher, he jumped from his seat and rushed from the classroom, nearly forgetting his backpack, and began running towards home. The cement squares of the sidewalk passed beneath his feet in a blur until he was one block from home, and then his pace slowed to a reluctant walk as his stomach began to swirl. Once standing in front of his front door, he took a deep breath, placed his hand on the chilled doorknob, and entered the house.
He walked past the kitchen where his mother was stationed; the smells of her homemade pies perfumed the hallway that led to his father’s office, and he gripped his wrinkled report card with shaky hands as he approached the door. Standing outside the room for several heart-pounding moments, his heart seemed to stick to his throat as he forgot to breathe. When he did finally rap on the door, the knocks were light, and he prayed that they would go unheard, but the gruff voice of his father responded immediately.
“What is it?” The words dripped with frustration and impatience.
Regret washing over him, Braden opened the door and tentatively stepped into the dark study. Thick red curtains were draped across the windows, and a gold cord of rope tied them tightly shut. A lamp with a gold metallic base threw dim hues over the desk, its cream shade muffling rather than illuminating the room. The carpets stretched out clean and white, vacuumed nightly by Braden’s mother, and he looked down at his feet, relieved he had removed his soggy boots in the mudroom. The desk, a looming fortress of mahogany wood, sat against the far wall of the room, and his father’s solid slate of a back stood in greeting as he scribbled upon a desk calendar that was surrounded by a frothy sea of white, discarded papers.
“What do you need,” Jim asked sternly, still facing the desk and not the intruder.
Braden approached slowly, shuffling his feet that now felt like lead, and laid the slip of paper upon the desk. The page now looked petty and miniscule next to the towers of manuscripts and layers of sticky notes. Jim slid his reading glasses down his nose to turn and look at Braden with a piercing glare before picking up the paper. He unfolded it with an excruciating precision that made Braden’s stomach lurch. Once the report card was completely unfurled, Jim stared blankly at the line of A’s.
“Your mom will be happy. Tell her to put it on the fridge.”
“Are you – are you happy, Dad?” Braden watched as his father’s head bob up and down in a nod.
“Mhm,” was all he said, and without a second glance he set the paper on the edge of his desk and began to tap his foot. Feeling the wetness brimming in his eyes and the redness creeping into his cheeks, Braden snatched the artifact and darted from the room in a panic. He sprinted past the kitchen where his mother still stood guard over dinner and dessert and up the stairs to his cold bedroom. The blinds were still drawn and the winter sun was laying its head to rest early, leaving a gloom to rest around and within Braden. Without thinking, he grabbed his backpack, ripping out the school supplies and replacing them with a change of clothes, the box of granola bars he kept on his desk, a water bottle, and a small blanket. Creeping back down the stairs, his movements were now much slower, and he obsessed over every creak and thump that his footsteps summoned from the floorboards. He snuck his way into the mudroom where he donned his coat and hat as silently as a ghost slipping through a graveyard.
Braden passed through the freezing night air as darkness rapidly enveloped him like a heavy blanket falling to the earth. He moved through the streets unconsciously, unconcerned with time and place, wandering with no plans: he only intended to escape. Finding a cold nook in a ditch hidden beneath the skeleton of a frozen Weeping Willow, he buried himself in his blanket and ate a granola bar, shivering as he began to think about what he was doing.
“I wish I could really run away. It doesn’t matter how much they hate me; I have to go back.” Tears began to fall cold on his cheeks, and his eyelashes stiffened into pinprick icicles.
“I’ve never been good enough,” was the last thought that slipped through his mind before dreams immersed him in a sweet forgetfulness.
The damp night shook him throughout his dreams, and hard blocks of mud began to cling to his jacket. He awoke to the humming of an engine as one firm arm curled beneath his knees and another held him beneath the shoulders, cradling him into a warm chest. He felt himself being slipped onto the smooth leather seats in the back of a car, and he opened his eyes to see the cream suede roof of his mother’s Subaru Outback above him. The car ride home was gentle, and the voices of his parents were hushed to whispers that he couldn’t comprehend, that he didn’t want to comprehend. Lulled into a half-sleep by the gentle murmur of the car and the persistent stream of hot air from the vent above, he was barely aware of being lifted from the car and carried into his room, but when he felt his father’s calloused hand smooth the cold air from his forehead, Braden snapped out of the fuzzy reality and into clear consciousness.
“You found me,” he said in a whisper, incredulous that his parents had even noticed he had gone.
“What can I get you?” Jim asked, ignoring his son’s simple epiphany. Braden’s mother stood in the doorway, her silhouette a dark shadow against the light in the hall, and Braden could see her wringing her hands and swaying from heel-to-toe in a nervous fever.
“Are you hungry?” his father persisted. Braden merely nodded, forgetting the angry thoughts and the overwhelming sadness that had swamped him hours earlier. Jim rose from the edge of the bed and kissed his wife’s cheek in the doorway.
“It’ll be alright, Debs. He’s back now. You should go get some sleep too.” She stayed in the doorway with him for several moments holding onto his arm with both hands and looking up into his eyes before he added, “I’ll come to bed tonight.”
When Jim got back to Braden’s room, he brought with him the scent of apple pie, and in his hand he held an old leather book. He propped Braden’s pillows up and adjusted him into a sitting position against the headboards, then handed him the plate of dessert before opening the volume of Aesop’s Fables, which had once been Braden’s favorite.
The bedtime stories were read in such a deep and soothing voice that the pie was left half eaten on the bedside table as drowsiness washed over Braden like the tides. Jim laid the book down beside the discarded plate and leaned forward to do something he hadn’t done in years: he kissed his son’s forehead. Watching Braden’s eyes begin to close, he felt a pang in his chest.
How had he forgotten his son had existed? For months now, he had thought of his son as a pest, something in the way, always beneath his feet, tripping him. Or had it been years? Jim squeezed his eyes tightly shut as he tried to push the guilt away.
“How could I forget?” he wondered. “How could I not have tried to love him more? But I do love him. I just forgot. I do love him, I just didn’t show it.” He looked at Braden’s face again and stroked the hair off of the smooth forehead.
“I love you so much,” he said to his sleeping son. “If I can promise you anything, it’s that I love you.” He stood up and began to leave the room, when he saw a crumpled piece of paper on the floor. Picking it up and smoothing out the wrinkles, he turned off the lights and walked down to his study where he pinned the report card in the middle of his cluttered cork board. Going to the bookshelf on the other side of the room, he found an old picture of Debbie pushing a 2-year-old Braden in a swing and moved it to his desk. As he was leaving the study, he noticed his pillow on the leather. Picking it up, he sighed, wishing he could change so much of his life.
“No better time than now,” he said, turning off the light with his pillow in hand and going to join his wife in their bedroom.
Friday, February 11, 2011
Encounters of the Third Nipple
Sitting in the Hasting’s café,
My eyes shift over the rows of magazines –
Automobile, People, Time –
And I tune into the hum of the coffee machine.
I’m trying to ignore my friend
As she whines about her lackluster Valentine.
Oh, how she bores me.
I’m more intrigued by the “30 Things to do to a Naked Man”
That Cosmo is offering to teach me.
But then she asks me something brilliant.
Finally something worth my time:
“Have you seen The Boxer yet?”
A cold breath of February air bursts through the glass door of the café,
And as if on cue, Mark Wahlberg struts in,
Tall, ripped, and sexy,
Swaggering like he’s straight out of Pirates of the Caribbean,
With sweat glistening on his bare chest in the rigid 30 degree weather.
He walks past the ogling barista,
Past my star struck friend,
And up to me.
“Mark Wahlberg,” I say in a whisper, my voice trembling in his presence.
“Call me Marky Mark.”
His voice is like a lion’s – low, rumbling, and fierce.
He takes my hand, and I swoon.
I wake up to a sun beating down on me
And heating the golden sand that I lie upon.
I’m in Jamaica.
Marky Mark is next to me,
Sprawled out on a red beach towel
In those tight swim trunks that Daniel Craig wore in Casino Royale:
The one’s that only Calvin Klein models should wear.
He hands me a bottle of tanning lotion,
And as I spread the brown plaster over his bulging shoulders,
I begin to wish I had read “30 Things to do to a Naked Man.”
Slowly, he turns to me, his third nipple covered in sand,
And tells me he has a confession to make.
I brace myself for those three special words:
“I’m a secret agent,” he says.
He’s in a James Bond tuxedo,
Running across a highway with my body swung over his shoulder.
At the last second he jumps over a semi - Michael Jordan style -
And fires his Walther PPK at the bad guys.
“Hey, have you seen The Boxer yet?”
He asks me suddenly.
But it’s not the growling voice of an untamed beast this time,
It’s the obnoxious drawl of the girl sitting across the café table.
I shake my head, examining the 80 year-old-man that I had been staring at.
“No, I haven’t,” I finally say. “Wanna go read Cosmo?”