Wednesday, August 10, 2011

A Sweet Poem from Someone Who Once Loved Me

July 2
  • For Paula



    Parked, a small sub-compact

    to the side of the dark byway.

    Parked, like teenagers two,

    Tho their twenties they’re well into;

    Destined in fact for their respective nestling homes.



    Parked in near-pure innocent delight,

    Though dawdling thru *the Darling Buds of May* - -

    Yes, Tulips too, but face is most to face.

    Peach fuze fine and yee-lashes of lace:

    to sate the scentifaction of the chaste.



    So alive and glowing,

    The reserve of the yearning,

    Love in taste blooms,

    Blush in face consumes.



    Ten + 20 + 50 minutes slow - -



    Could she sense my affection was

    Starved, that night so long ago?

Sunday, July 31, 2011

What Every Woman Wants to Hear

Never let the book cover fool you. While the spine on this one is well read, the pages are full of romance and scandal. He knows what a woman wants to hear. And I like that, a lot.


"Who is this Leonard Cohen?" you may ask. Well, I've got that covered as well. Really great stuff.

The Timely's and the Godsend's

The year before J1 was born, we bought the house we still live in today. I remember my sister telling my mother "Aw, he bought her a dollhouse.", and that's exactly what it is. She, referring to my dollhouse, sits proudly in an old neighborhood, that's nice and flat, and is covered in a canopy of Oak and Walnut tree's that are older than she is.

When J1 was 18 months old, he met his lifelong friend Z. They met at what I like to call "Baby Harvard" which is the best child care center in the city. The center is housed up on the hill, where both Z's mother and I work. Soon after we met, they moved their family to my neighborhood, and our kids have gone to all the same schools. They are the Timely family.

A year or so later, the Godsend's moved into the old yellow and white Victorian across the street. The house had been broken into two units for decades, and the Godsend's, with all their children, grandchildren, and extended family, restored it to it's original glory of a single family home.

Together, our village has weathered many storms, both figuratively and literally, and we've all been there for each other. Recently, the Godsend's announced that they would soon depart our sweet village, and while I know that change is the only constant, it's a day I've always dreaded.

Once, when we were teenagers, my sister told me she dreamt that I had gone down the drain in the kitchen sink as a big blob of slime. No surprise there, but then she said I suddenly flew back out as a butterfly. I've never forgotten that dream.

I think I'm ready to talk about the long storm I've weathered, because I believe I'm coming out the other side. But this I know for sure, I would have never survived without the support of my village. And for me to tell these stories, you've got to know who the Timely's and Godsend's are, because none of it could have happened without them.