Saturday, September 26, 2009
Update!
Saturday, February 7, 2009
Things I've Lost:
I cried, screaming until my mother
found it oozing puffy white stuffing
in the women’s dressing room.
My first boyfriend—Kyle—when he
didn’t come back for second grade.
I can’t remember missing him.
A library book once in the third grade: I recall
scrambling on hands and knees, searching behind
my hamster’s dirty cage,
while I mumbled through my Catechism, praying
for a miracle.
My brother’s favorite mitt—purposely (of course),
until he threatened to break my nose.
The chance to be “Daddy’s girl,” thanks in part to
a few too many beers, a couple of crisp
joints, and his “disease.”
An old flame’s first name, as he fought through
crowds yesterday to say hello. Suffered through
pained silence while I ransacked old wounds.
Such a Pretty House
Burning, burning—everything is burning.
You walk backwards down the stairs, smoke
flies past into hallways. Paint, leaden and melting
in the air, falls from singed walls. Drapes explode
in purples and golds and you’re trapped on the floor by the front door,
grasping a handle that’s hot enough to melt flesh
from your eyes. Black snow falls from the ceilings
as children sing Ring Around the Rosie on your front lawn.
They are blind, their black fogged glasses cling to expressionless faces.
Adults in perfect houses bake muffins while ashes
fall off of your walls. They bury you.
You are up to your chin in soot now, and the sweat
your face creates leaves gray pools around your neck. You hear
the children as they sing, cracking voices through cracking window
glass, and you wonder if their parents ever burn as the
creaking, clacking, flaming beams crush you where you lay.
Silly Games
I’ve never gotten how
you bite your lip when
you smoke your cigarettes,
your cancer sticks.
Or how the tongue I’d like to take from
you enjoys mocking me daily.
I sit here, sobbing, while your outline
traces our sheets and our last
fight screams in my head.
You smiled even as I gave you the last
of me. She called again last week.
Whispered your name before the click
of the dial tone leapt at my ear.
You should have seen the heat on my face,
and in my thoughts, and in my eyes.
p.s. This is an revision of an earlier attempt I had made at a sonnet. Here's the first one: My Poor Attempt At a Sonnet
Get On With the Show
New year began at yesterday’s sundown.
Atonement day came and went, some found it
sweet, but regret the bitter aftertaste.
In the 1960s he crouched with iron red
in his mouth, as the children stood away.
Innocence watched a crimson smile, eyes wide,
tiny fingers curled in defensive balls.
A Maryland man, with blood on his hands.
The sentence was less than death.
He wished finality into existence, willing
a release of electricity through veins hard-wired
to humanity. He lurched once, gasped.
Boogeyman
The man with no arms.
The man with no legs, no face.
The man that comes at night with one eye open.
The catch-you-in-your-sleep man.
The hidden man.
The man in shadows.
The man with blood in his eyes.
The man with finger nails like kitchen knives.
The man mother said didn’t exist.
The man father scolded you for believing in.
The unseen-scratches-on-the-window man.
The sack man.
The shrieking man.
The melting face man.
The man with purple lips.
The man with dripping feet.
The man with a lisp and broken teeth.
The find-you-in-your closet man.
The man you shredded sheets for.
The man with razors in his mouth.
The man who comes in green fog.
The man who comes through ceiling holes.
The man with the strength of bulls.
The man with fire in his mouth.
The reason you sing your children to sleep.
Aubade
Call yourself in with a case
of the Mondays and come back to
the universe in my sheets.
We’ll be bag people, hop trains to California
tomorrow, tomorrow.
I’d be homeless with you in a
heartbeat – if only I’m able to keep
the pillows you’ve littered with your hairs,
my little souvenirs of our nights together.