Monday, November 17, 2008

Twelve


I was sitting in the basement of my childhood home,
on a folding chair, leaning over the large
woodbox. I thought the woodbox made the perfect desk.
The fire in the woodstove to my left, crackling,
keeping me warm. I must have been inspired.

I was twelve years old when I wrote my first poem.

"What Is Time?"

Time is a clock that never stops.
For some, time is fast, they never even rest.
For some, time is slow, which is always a bore.
For me, time is an adventure.
It's a time to live.
It's a time to be happy.
It's a time to explore places where I've never gone before.
To me, time makes my life more to live for.
Because it won't stop for me.
It won't stop for you.
It won't stop for anyone.
So never waste time because time needs you.
It needs you to fill the minutes with life.
That's why time is what it is.

It's a silly little poem, but I love it just the same.
I love it because it was simply how I was feeling.
- In that moment, at the fabulously hopeful age of twelve.
Unrevised, unchanged, I still think it rocks.

My God-daughter just turned twelve.
I've been thinking of her quite often.
Does she share the same hope and
excitement for her future?
She's amazing, smart and beautiful.
I hope she knows.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

A moment for me


Some days you're just holding on for dear life - trying to keep
the tears from falling, for no apparant reason.

Then...

Dad came home from work and
promptly snuck back out the door to run some errands.

He returned early enough to let me
sneak out the door myself.

Our cute lil Bug was none the wiser.
I haven't had much time to myself lately.

Hmmmm. How could I make the best of this time
all alone returning a movie at the grocery store?
Wander the aisles in search of a great deal, that's how!
A lazy ten minutes later I'm walking to my car carrying
broccoli, Quorn nuggets, Puffs (with lotion), and a
roll of paper towels. I'm such a wild chic.

Through the green lit stoplight I drive, making a last second
(yet carefully maneuvered)
right turn
to the liquor store.
Inside, I find my favorite bottles
of cheap red wine. Although I have
heard from various educated sources that
"the bigger the bottle, the better the wine",
I stick to the basic, classic bottle for two.
I buy three bottles.
Insatiable...
Vampire...
and... I just can't recall.

Now I'm back on Main.
Here's the stop sign at 8th.
I almost turn left, just two blocks from home...
Instead I break away, drive straight - a few blocks downtown,
seeing the people walking, some stores open,
some restaurants closed. It's off-season.
(I didn't know what that meant until I moved here.)
To my left is our kick-ass, one screen, small town movie theater.
Every town should have one. - or maybe not?
It's 7:31 pm. People are still buying tickets outside.
I lock the door, jump out mid-dial. Dad needs to
answer because Mom needs a break. As I hand the money over
he answers the phone.

I have enough cash for the ticket, popcorn and small drink.
Total is $10.00...I have exactly twenty cents left over.
I sit down in the perfect seat, noone blocking my view.

Away I go, it's not my life for a couple of hours.
I'm transported into the past, into someone
else's drama. I need this. I've been craving this.
It's so simple. But, it's so rare.

Two hours later I'm walking out of this
cool little theater and onto the bricked sidewalks.
Into crisp air that's kissing my cheeks.
I'm a bit disoriented, my bearings are momentarily lost.
I'm still in that other world.
A world that, before my daughter and husband,
would have included me seriously considering an escape.
Starting over.

Now I will drive home and "hope"fully share
my brief reprieve with the father of my daughter.

I hope he'll be happy that I got to break out of
routine. It's the small adventures now.

Will I be content?

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

November 5th, 2008

Spying the fresh white
through glass, it's evident I'm
surrounded by flakes.


I thank God that this election is over.

Saturday, November 1, 2008

A deep, dark, sickeningly sweet secret, - revealed.


I want to eat ALL of the Halloween candy.

There, I said it.


I love candy. I love sugar.
When I was a child,
I committed some awfully
terrible sugar sins.
The pure cane sugar,
the powdered sugar,
the brown sugar,
the boxed jello,
I ate it straight.

All of it.

Can you even imagine?

I poured it into
sandwich bags and
cut a small hole in the corners.
Maybe I dropped a little water
into the bag to solidify it some, but
I squeezed it into my mouth,
frosting style.

Disgusting.


A school fundraiser?
Bad idea. I was more likely to
eat the candy than sell it.

No self control

Nada

None


If you think you have a
sweet tooth, you've got
nothing on me.