Wednesday, December 1, 2010

He Loves Me

I snuggle my head into his shoulder,
Feeling his muscles flex
As he pulls me closer to him.
He smells of aftershave and cooking grease
Familiarity
I breathe it in deeply
Memorizing.
I’m warm and sleepy
With him wrapped around me
And the rhythm of his breathing
Next to my ear begins to sound
Like a lullaby, soothing me to sleep,
But I know that I can only fight sleep for so long.
The bed creaks, as the pressure
Of my weight is released,
But he begs me
Not to leave tonight.
I stand, but feel his arms
Around my waist,
Pulling me back down to him.
He presses his palms into my thighs,
Pushing them up into my hips
Digging them into my waist
Cupping them around my breasts,
Pressing his weight
Onto my chest, and
I gasp for air, but try
To camouflage my innocence
Because he knows
Where to go 
And how to get there,
And naivety will get me left behind
So I follow.
He loosens his grip and moves delicately
To the back of my neck,
Lifting my face towards his.
Eyes closed
Lips open
Distracting me, while he inches
His way back down
To my hips, maneuvering through
The obstacle course of
Belt, button, and zipper
Like the expert that he is.
His fingers snake their way
Into the waist of my jeans.
I think that I’m supposed to say something
Alluring or do something
Sexy but I don’t know
And I’m afraid
I grab his wrist to stop him
To tell him ‘no’ but
 I need time to think and
I don’t know
I don’t know
I don’t know
He doesn’t give 
me time to think before
I feel him in me
And I close my eyes
And I turn my head
And I wait
And listen as he says
That it’s okay
Because he loves me.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Unfinished story

 Beginning of a story that I never finished. Kind of interested in going back and seeing what can be done with this. First draft. Ignore the bland descriptions.      

 The original plan was that he would go off to war to label himself a hero, and come back stepping through the gates of airport security, returning to his beautiful, young wife waiting impatiently to run into his arms. He would lift her up, breathing in the scent of her perfume, kiss her soft, rosy lips and hear her tell him how much she had missed him, just before they ran off together. He had it all planned out.
What he got instead was an impatient greasy cab driver waiting outside for him, smelling of cigarette smoke and old leather, and who drove five under the speed limit, watching the little red numbers rise on the meter on the dashboard with satisfaction.
          Nothing looked any different, when the cab pulled up into the driveway. The house looked the same, small and quaint, but suitable for a newly married couple. There was the white, wooden swing on the front porch still creaking every time the wind blew. From the window, he could see his wife, the eye-catcher, her stunning frame, tall and thin, wavy golden locks framing her face. He noticed, upon first glance, that his stunning prize of a wife had changed. Her hair laid a little flatter, the curves of her thighs appeared to be a little rounder, and her distinctly tiny waist wasn’t quite so noticeable. Perhaps the biggest difference was the babbling, bubbling, baby attached to her hip. This is where I come in.
   Sometimes, I wondered what it would be like if he never came back at all. If it was just me and my mom, perfectly fine on our own. I wondered if my life would have been better if I had never known him... if it had stayed just the two of us.

Friday, October 8, 2010

Entertainer

College assignment.... Writing about a character who loves a job that you would hate to have.
Something I might want to revisit.

Most people don’t know what it’s like to feel wanted.
Really wanted.
To have every crease and dimple highlighted by blinding fluorescent lights
and gleaming beads of sweat, with almost nothing to hide yourself behind.
To be exposed for everything that you are and still be craved.
There is nothing to help you pretend- no forced conversations
no scripted pleasantries.
Just you.
They watch your every movement like hungry dogs, salivating,
but all you see is, how much they love you
no matter what you may have done
or who you are.
They need you
There’s something exhilarating about them
wanting to touch you and have you
but knowing that they cant.
You lean so close to let them, teasing
Giving them a taste of the unattainable
You are the one who gets away, every time.
They will come back for you,
And you will be remembered.

Response to a college literary magazine meeting

            It was clear, from day one, that we wouldn’t get along. They go for subject matter- the abstract, the sexual, the mysterious. To them, topics are key and can overshadow poor writing, as long as the subject is strong. I go for expression. I think that any subject can be made into brilliance, with the right style. I think dark poetry and such is often forced. It’s a pose. People want to stand out and be artistic and deep and they create feelings that they don’t have. I want to read something real.
           Once they realized that I was not afraid to disagree with them, they quickly learned to interrupt and cut me off. It’s kind of a cult-mentality. The group of staff members is a very close community, and as soon as one person’s opinion is stated, it is the duty of the other members to agree. Personally, I think this is a cop-out. A literary magazine should be representative of every type of writing about every kind of subject matter, which can only be done if the editors have different perspectives, to bring out the value and weaknesses in different pieces. I am really the only variety in this group.
            I know that I am not the world’s greatest writer, and it is unlikely that I will ever be. Actually, it is unlikely that I will ever be recognized for my writing, at all, at least in the way that I want to be. This being said, I think I’m good. I know how conceited that sounds, but I do think that I can write. I have to be able to write, and I have to keep getting better, because this is the one thing that I love to do. I have to do it justice.
            I had assumed that they would not enjoy what I submitted. As editors, though, I was sure that they could separate their own taste from their acknowledgment of the value of the writing. My two submissions were at the bottom of the pile, anonymously. When we got to them, everyone fell silent, as they do when we move on to any new piece. Finally, someone spoke up, “Wow. Where do I even begin with this?” Okay… Is this good or bad? Impressed? Disgusted? “I mean, honestly, I am genuinely concerned for the mental-state of this author.”
            It went something like this:
            “Yeah, I don’t think this person knows that we are supposed to be in college.”
            “I know, right? Missing your mom? Okay, how old are we? You don’t write about that.”
            “Exactly! And this other one about the love letter to nobody? God, someone please find this girl someone to go out with. This is just pathetic. If you’re going to write to nobody, at least find someone. Honestly, pathetic. Who is that lonely?”
            “But the one about her mom? That’s messed up. They have medication for that kind of thing, and, I am not even kidding, I really think they need some. It’s psychotic. I truly am worried about this person.”
            “I feel like if I met her in person, I would have to go up to her and be like ‘what the hell is going on in your head?’ Like, what is wrong with you? Please, let me help you.”
            And it continued like that for the next ten minutes. I sat there, dumbstruck and insulted. This is not how it’s done. This is not professional. Where is the grading scale? Where is the mention of my line-breaks and metaphors and symbolism? Did you notice the repetition and the alliteration? I’m sorry you can’t relate to having a relationship with your mom, but does that really mean that my writing is less valuable?
            I didn’t know what to say, so I said nothing. The editor kept her head down, knowing that those pieces were mine, but she didn’t stop them. It was almost eleven thirty that night when we finished up, and I said my polite goodbyes, picked up my folder, and walked out. I wasn’t more than a block away from our building when it hit me. I sat down, against one of the buildings on Broad Street, and sobbed. I called my mom (exactly what I was criticized so harshly for in one of my poems) and cried.
            There was no piece of me left. The one thing that I prided myself on, the only thing that I truly enjoyed doing, had been stripped from me, completely. On top of this, every aspect of my sense of self-worth, what I loved and what I had experienced had been thrown on the ground and spat on. I was ashamed for, essentially, everything that made me who I was- my family, my relationships, my pride and my weaknesses.
            There is a false notion that, to be recognized, you have to be different. You have to feel differently and see differently and believe differently than everyone else. There is no beauty in the commonplace, because everyone has experienced it. What really makes art is what is not understood- something that leaves you wondering and maybe even a little shaken up. This is not true. To anyone who reads this, please do not fall victim to this misconception.
            Notice that nothing was said to criticize the way I write, only what I wrote about. They chose to create an idea of the me, as the author, to criticize, instead of criticizing the work I had done. I take no offense to someone telling me that my writing is bad. I encourage this, actually, because it gives me something to work with. No one in this group could tell me that my writing was bad, just that the anonymous author was.
I don’t write so that people will be shocked. I write, because I have something to say. I don’t read to be disturbed or confused. I read because I want to feel something, something that I can understand. I don’t admire art because it’s abstract. I admire it, because it says something to me. Anyone can be shocking. Anyone can talk about something taboo. To write about something that everyone knows, that everyone can relate to, and bring out the life and beauty in it... that is good writing, at least to me.
            If you have ever been told that you can’t do something, or that you are wrong for doing it… keep doing it and do it better and harder than you ever have. Don’t let people, who want to be something they are not, try to mold you into the same, confining shell that they have created for themselves. Write what you know is true and real for you, not for anyone else. Never write, because someone wants to hear it. Write because you need to say it. Write something that means something to you, and I promise, that it will mean something to someone else, as well.

Friday, October 1, 2010

The Beginning

 dialogue assignment for UNIV 112... write a short story in nothing but dialogue. Possibly, one of the most difficult assignments I have had. I'm posting this, though, because (for whatever reason) I'm intrigued.

“Hey there.”
“…”
“I said, ‘hey there,’”
“…”
“Hey, buddy. I’m trying to say hello, over here!”
“…Hey…”
 “My name’s Dave.”
“…”
“What’s your name?”
“John.”
“Well, it’s nice to meet you, John! Where are you heading, this fine spring morning?”
“…”
“I said, ‘where are-‘”
“Nowhere.”
“Well how can you be going somewhere, if you're going nowhere?”
“I don’t know. Just… going. Doesn’t matter where.”
“Huh. Doesn’t sound too logical, does it? Well, me? I’m starting fresh. Yes, sir, starting fresh! My girl kicked me out. Something ‘bout not doing anything with my life or some bullshit, like that. Can you believe it? You know what I say, though? I say, good riddance. I’m gunna go out there and start fresh. Make a new name for myself. What about you? You starting fresh, too?”
“You could say that.”
“Well, you got about fifteen minutes to decide what you’re guna do with your life, then the bus is guna take you somewhere or another and you’ll be stuck.”
“I don’t get stuck.”
“I don’t mean stuck like stuck. I mean stuck like lost.”
“I don’t get lost.”
“Nah, everybody gets lost.”
“Not if you’re not trying to get anywhere.”
“Well, everyone is trying to get somewhere.”
“Not everyone.”
“Well, like me. I’m trying to start fresh, remember? I think I want to go to New York or California or something fancy like that, eventually, where everybody’s somebody. That’s where I’m trying to get. I want to be a somebody. What about you? You want to be a somebody, ‘cause everybody wants to be a somebody, so everybody’s trying to get somewhere.”
“Just trying to get away.”
“Away from what?”
“From everything.”
“Come on, John. Tell me.”
“I don’t think that’s really-“
“I’ll tell you a secret, and you tell me one.”
“I really don't think that's necessary.”
“Well, when I was younger, my grandpa used to take me down to the lake by his house, where we’d-“
“I said to drop it.”
“…”
“…”
“Well… you want to know my story, anyways?”
“Dave.”
“Hey, look at that! The bus is here! Alright, here we go! Starting the next adventure of my life, with my new pal John! No, I’m good to go, Mr. Bus driver. My buddy here has got my ticket covered.”
“What? No. I think you’re confused.”
“All that stuff you said about getting away made me think, John. I’m a grown man. Time to get out on my own. You’re alone. I’m alone. Two of us gotta stick together. And you look like you need a friend.”
“Seriously, I’m going to get on the bus now, and you’re just going to…go…”
“Go where?”
“Wherever you were going before this.”
“But… I got kicked out, remember? I don’t… I don’t have anywhere to go…”
“...”
“No, that’s okay. You’re right. You don’t need me tagging along. Said you were getting away from everything, but how can you get away from everything when you got dumb ol’ Dave following you around? Damn it, Dave.”
“…”
“No, no. Don’t worry about me. I’ll be fine. Don’t you worry about me. You can’t get lost if you’re not going nowhere, right, John? And I’ve got nowhere to go, so I’ll be just fine.”
“Don’t…”
“You were a good friend, John. Bout the best friend I coulda ever had.”
“I'm not…"
"Good luck, buddy. You take care of yourself. Don't worry about me. No, sir. Don't you-"
"Two, please.”

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

No Walls


my brother used to sit
outside on the roof at night
to live freely
with no walls
confining him
breaking
loose of authority and rules
his escape

he used to wait
until we were asleep
and creep
onto the ledge 
outside of his window
climbing up
the red brick walls
onto the steep ledge
of the roof

I would hear him drop
rocks down
onto the driveway
watching them crack 
open and I would
listen to his 
footsteps slipping
into sleep.

Friday, September 24, 2010

Just Write

            They all look at me, dumbly, as I go on about the literary worth of a poem whose title I can no longer remember. I’ve loved every minute of it. It starts out as a slam poem with poignant line-breaks, raunchy humor, and conflicting morals and ends with an internal dialogue between a man and the invisible angel and devil on his shoulder. This is a good poem. This is my kind of poem. I finish my spiel and look around the conference room at impatient faces, waiting to criticize. An awkward silence passes, then- “I didn’t like it.” “Definitely in the NO pile.” “There was too much in it.” “Not enough in it.” “Just bad.” Same thing happens with the next poem, and the one after that, and the short story, and the essay. What I like, they hate. What I hate, they adore.
What is this?! This is supposed to be my thing. I’m the writer and the editor and the English fanatic. And I’m good at it! So, why is there a table of senior staff members biting their tongues at my critiques? Am I losing it? Do I really not have any literary taste at all? What about my writing? Oh, God, my writing. Am I that bad??? They are going to edit my submissions, next week! This is not okay. This is not going to be good. Can I take them back, before they see them? Maybe I should just stop and quit, now.
            Snap out of it! You were the editor, last year. The editor, damn it! You know your stuff! You have a reputation to uphold. This is the dream! This is what you do. This is who. you. are. Screw the magazine and they editors and the critics and red pen and and the cross outs the NO pile and write. Write and write and don’t stop for anyone or anything. This is how it’s done. They’ll love you, or they’ll hate you… just as long as they feel something. Just. Keep. Writing.


Lullaby

(best speech assignment for FI 112)

            My father is the typical manly man, who considers “good reading” to be Dick’s Sporting Goods catalogs and NRA magazines and watches the Ultimate Fighting Championship religiously. He would rather spend a day hiking in the mountains than a week relaxing at the beach. He is popular among my friends for the enormous gun safe in our living room, the two Boa Constrictors that take up residence next to our television, as a sideshow of sorts, and biceps that are much too large for a 55 year old man who has lost the majority of his hair, not to mention a noticeable portion of his hearing. My childhood was spent wrestling on the front lawn and practicing martial arts on judo mats in the living room.
This being said, my father and I have profoundly different tastes. He watches westerns, while I prefer tragic romances. He takes three-minute showers while I indulge myself with thirty-minute soaks, taking four times as long to get dressed. His opinions are finite, while I avoid decisions as a general rule. He is strongly Republican, while I chose to be labeled an “independent.” To him, spontaneity is a dangerous lack of organized thought, while I am a firm believer of fate leading the way. He prefers the concrete. I prefer the abstract. If you were to create my father’s opposite, you would get me. As overly analytical and dangerously emotional as I am, he is just as lost for words when it comes to the sensitive and touchy-feely. This is where the problems occur.
My father would have been satisfied with a daughter who wanted to discuss politics and fishing or go hunting, which involves no talking at all. Instead, he received a feminized version of a chattering teeth toy. I am forever seeking approval for my continuous trains of thought, all of which are, simultaneously, my number one priority- a collision of explosive emotion that is beyond overwhelming for my father. We learned, many years ago, that the safest tactic to avoid our daily civil war was to just skim the surface. Don’t ask, don’t tell, and, if you must tell, do so in such a way that completely annihilates all possibility for disagreement. Stick with light jokes and previously approved topics. I was convinced that my father hated me. He argued against my reasoning for every thought I had, so I rejected any attempt he made for a truce. Eventually, we both stopped trying.
My father works the evening shift, and does not come home until after midnight, each night. Being a man whose habits die hard, even in my adolescent years, he would peak into my room to check on me when he came home, as he did when I was a child. One night, when I heard his key turn in our front door, for no obvious reason, I buried my face in my pillows and pulled the blankets tightly around my neck, feigning sleep. I saw a sliver of light sneak its way from my doorway onto my bed, as my father peeked into my room. Surprisingly, he fell for the act and inched the door open, carefully stepping into my blackened room. Once, he had maneuvered through the dark, successfully reaching my bedside, his hand reached out and blindly made its way to the side of my head.
My father stroked my hair gently, like he was touching a china doll, afraid to leave even a scratch, and tucked a curl behind my ear. “I love you, Mary,” he whispered. “You are smart and funny and pretty, and I am proud of you. You are a good girl, and I am proud to be your daddy.” Leaning forward, he kissed me on the side of my face and walked out of the room as silently as he had entered.
It took years for me to grow out of my self-righteous teenage state, and at least as long for my dad to begin to understand it, and, even then, agreeing was uncommon, but from that night onwards, I would wait. I would stay up late and wait for him, so that I could pretend to be asleep and listen to his tuneless lullaby, just to have some kind of verification of the feelings we both knew to be true but had not, yet, learned to express. We have taught each other and learned from each other, growing up together. I don't live in that house, anymore. I don't need to be checked on or tucked in. Phone calls suffice for communication, during the times that I am away. When I do come home, my dad will still come in to check on me, like he used to, and sometimes, I still pretend to be asleep… just in case.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Facebook

 UNIV 112 assignment about giving up technology for a day

I will not use Facebook. I will not use Facebook. It doesn’t matter if he commented on my status or if she likes my picture. Anything they post on my wall, they can tell me in person. I will not use Facebook. If they’re in a relationship today, they’ll be in one tomorrow… well, probably.  I will not use Facebook. No need to poke back until tomorrow. I can comment twice in the morning, if I need to. The videos will still be up, and if I didn’t know them well enough to know it was their birthday already, they probably won’t notice if I comment a day late. I will not use Facebook. If they’re going to chat me, they have my number. If they don’t have my number, they don’t matter that much anyway. I will not use Facebook. They won’t withdraw the friend-request if I take a day to respond. Maybe, I’ll seem busy and more interesting, if I wait. I will not use Facebook. The events won't be over. The groups will still exist. My inbox won't erase and my notifications won't disappear. Status update:   
Mary Searls "will not use Facebook."............ oops.


People Watching at the Gas Station

 Realized the extent of my people watching. Decided to document one. Possible inspiration.

White female.
Age difficult to determine due to excessive of plastic surgery: Mission accomplished.
Approximately 50 years?
Thinning blonde hair, dried from dye, needs to be washed.
Thin and frail, yellowed fingernails (probably a smoker) that need to be cut.
Metric ton of mascara.
Painted on eyebrows.
Purchase:18 lottery tickets.
Desperation.

White male.
Approximately 35 years.
Short. Boney.
Thinning blonde hair.
Leathery skin. Wrinkled. Darkened.
Smells of smoke.
Worn jeans, stained white t-shirt.
Purchase: Looks at the cashier and holds up 4 fingers, then ten.
Pump 4, 10 dollars worth of gas.
Mute.

Black female.
Approximately 25 years.
Short, thick stature.
No makeup, messy braided hair.
Loud, low voice.
Loose gray t-shirt tucked into “mom jeans.”
Determined to joke about the service with every person in line.
Purchase:1 mini pack of fig newtons, 6 pack of cheap beer, 1 cigar, 1 gallon of water.
Recipe for one lonely night in.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Until My Dying Day


           We sat in the giant purple love seat in my living room, and he kissed me, finally, during the closing credits. He could play the songs from the soundtrack, beautifully, on his black and white, pinstriped guitar. Sometimes, I would attempt to follow along, my fingers stumbling over the piano keys of the ancient, out-of-tune piano in his living room, but, usually, I would just listen, curling up next to him, snuggling into his shoulder and breathing in his scent of aftershave and cooking grease. We quoted the lines and knew every lyric.
We were in his little blue Scion, driving back from dinner at Bottom’s Up Pizza, listening to the radio. I knew he was going to play our song, when he clicked on the CD player in his car, giving me that look that I knew so well- narrowing his eyes a little, focusing in on me, the right corner of his mouth turning up in a slight smile. Track 7. “Never knew I could feel like this,” he began.
“Come what may
             Come what may
             I will love you,
             until my dying day.”
            As he sang the last two lines, holding my left hand in his right, steadying the steering wheel against his knee, he squeezed my fingers three times. I- love- you. I understood. From then on, it didn’t matter where we were, who we were with, if we could speak out loud or not- three small touches were all we needed. I love you, “until my dying day.” It fixed everything- every fight about his neediness or my lack of appreciation, my over-emotional temperament or his lack thereof. Three touches, three words, and all was forgotten.
At seventeen, it was easy to fall in love, easy to promise to give our lives to each other, easy to ignore reality and foresee only a happily-ever-after. It was easy to keep counting the days of our togetherness- three weeks, two months, four months and a week and three days, or some other obscenely insignificant number that made us feel the need to celebrate, as if we were surprised that things that worked out for long. As if we were waiting for things to fall apart.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Running Shoes

 Observation of a women in the salon. I was intrigued. Hope to put more emphasis on the shoes and their significance?

She wears white, Nike running shoes and sits up straight and tall, as best as she can, despite the rounded contour of her back, with her hands folded politely in her lap.

She wears no jewelry at all, except a thick, golden, diamond-studded band on the third finger of her left hand, which is a little too loose. I imagine it fitting perfectly on plump, youthful fingers fourty or so years earlier, when it first found its way to her. Although that ring is the only ornament she wears, her earlobes hang down heavily, proof of too many decorated evenings out, now in her past.

Her hair is thinning, and the color is fading into a pure white, dusted lightly with speckles of salt and pepper. Her part is a perfect line, extending from her forehead to the middle of her crown, separating her hair into two exact sections, each brushed down carefully and tucked neatly behind her ears, ending just at the nape of her neck.

There are bags under her eyes, puffy and wrinkled. The crevices in her skin trail down to her cheeks and lips, thin and pink, and finally to her neck, which disappears into a blue, cotton blouse, paired with white cotton Capri’s, matching perfectly with the blue and white running shoes she wears, out of which I can see just a glimpse of paper-thin skin covering two bony, fragile legs.

The running shoes are what intrigue me the most- so white and clean, obviously never used for their intended purpose. As she makes her way to the register, to pay for her haircut, she takes shaky, careful steps, each foot deliberately placed. Heel- toe. Heel- toe. She looks at her shoes, wiggling her toes in them every now and then, admiring them, as her ankles tremble under the stress of standing. Occasionally, she reaches down to retie the laces or straighten out the tongue just so, so conscious and protective of her running shoes, which, I am sure, were never bought to run in.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Dear No One

One day
we’ll take midnight walks
down the streets
of my neighborhood
barefoot
in too much of a rush
to be alone
to bother
with tying laces

One day
I’ll spray lavender perfume
on my chest
and wrists
to keep you close
but you’re favorite scent
you’ll tell me
is the way the nape
of my neck smells
when you kiss it

One day
you’ll know
how to hold my hand
fingers twisted together
with my thumb over yours
the way I like it

One day
you’ll know
that a kiss
on my forehead
is the cure
for every stress
every headache
every long day

One day
I’ll press
your palm against mine
and think
about how tiny
my hand looks
in yours
and how, despite my
5 foot 8, 150 pound frame
I feel delicate

One day
you’ll count
all my freckles
even remembering the one
on my little toe
determined to memorize
each constellation
mapped out
across my skin

One day

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Tupelo Honey


It was the late shift, at the hospital where my mother was working. Ideal, if you want to get out of doing work, but the most boring shift of the day, with all the patients sleeping, all the visitors gone for the day. The nurses sat around with little to do.  They began to draw labs from each other, honing their skills, they may have convinced themselves, but merely fighting boredom is closer to the truth. Each lab came back negative for this and that, as expected.
One of the nurses handed my mother the results to her test. They all looked at each other in disbelief. The labs were for fun only; just to keep their hands busy and their minds entertained with impossible ideas. This is why my mother could not believe that she was pregnant.
“You’re joking,” she said over and over. Having only been married for a year, she hadn’t planned for anything like this, until things had settled down and there was enough time, not to mention money, to bring another life into the mix. “You’re joking.”
My mother signed out of the hospital, terrified and trembling as she walked across the parking lot to her car. She unlocked the car, opened the door, and sat staring at the steering wheel. It took a few minutes to get her head, to begin to comprehend the immenseness of what had just taken place, before she turned on the ignition. As soon as she turned the key, the radio clicked on and “Tupelo Honey,” by Van Morrison, began to play. “She’s as sweet as tupelo honey,” he sang to her, reassuringly. She says that this was the moment that my name was spoken to her, “by an angel,” she tells me
When my mother would put me to sleep at night, or when I would crawl into her lap crying, she would sing the lyrics to me. Even now, as I live away from her in my own world, living my own life, she reminds me every now and then:
“You can take all the tea in China
Put it in a brown bag for me
Sail right around all the seven oceans
Drop it straight into the deep blue sea
She’s as sweet as tupelo honey
She’s an angel of the first degree
She’s as sweet, she’s as sweet as tupelo honey
Just like honey, baby, from the bee”

Bucket List

1. Take a submarine down to see the Titanic
2. Go to Africa
3. Get into nursing school (done)
4. Get married
5. Be a mom
6. Be published on a large scale
7. Preform in Grease (done)
8. Write a novel
9. Never be divorced
10. Never have regrets
11. Try escargot
12. Learn to ride the public bus (done)
13. Learn to sew clothes
14. Write a song
15. Sing at a open-mic/karaoke (done)
16. Take a hip-hop class
17. Learn an entire rap
18. See the Lion King on Broadway (done)
19. Take a Zumba class (done)
20. Read the entire Bible
21. Go skinny dippin
22. Ice skate on a frozen pond
23. Become fluent in Spanish
24. Try squid (done)
25. Read all of Jane Austen's novels
26. Read as many of the "classics" as I can- poems, novels, etc.
27. Learn to do a cartwheel
28. Be a famous author
29. Advance my degree after college
30. Kiss someone in the rain (done)
31. Completely dye my hair (done)
32. Put a crazy color in my hair (done)
33. Make a movie
34. Go to Spain
35. Fall in love (done)

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

To My Mother, Upon Leaving For College

If I could
I would shrink you 
down to fun-size
and slip
you into the left front pocket
of my jeans
so that
when i stood
as i do
with my thumb hooked
into the opening
i could
wiggle my finger around
and know
that you were there
even when you've lost your phone
again 
or your hands are covered in glue
due to some, new, experimental
home-improvement project
you are determined to carry out

I would pick you up
and place you
behind my ear
so you could
sing to me
a few notes too low
a few notches too loud
a few lines made up
skipping the verses, of course
but, somehow, better than the original

I would set you on the tip of my pen
so you could
shift your weight
this way and that way
steering my hand
where it needs to go
saving me
the red pen cross-outs
and ruthless critiques
that I rely so dependently upon

I would even let you sit
on the dashboard of that
rundown, beat up, hunk of metal
you make me
drive and I wouldn't even complain
during the "slow down!…dear Jesus!… don't hit the biker"s
so that you could tell me
where to go, so that
I wouldn't lose my way
too far from home
as I sometimes tend to do

If I could
I would shrink you 
down to fun-size, so that
as far away as I needed to go
to stretch my wings
and test the waters
I could wiggle my fingers
into the left front pocket
of my jeans
and there you would be.

Sunday, February 28, 2010

Why I Write

It can start with a single word. One, tiny, insignificant, minuscule, word that somehow, sparks something inside you. As soon as that one word is planted in your mind, it begins to grow. It grows and grows, until there is no more room in your head.

It spreads down your arms and into your wrists, tickling them as it stretches deep into your fingers. You twiddle your thumbs, tap out a beat, try writing something down, but it doesn’t die out; it just keeps getting bigger.

Then, that one unclear, undeveloped idea finds its way into your mouth where it turns into words, phrases- sentences even. It’s heavy and uncomfortable to keep inside of you. It feels like a marble sitting on your tongue, and it keeps rolling around, knocking against your teeth, until you just have to spit it out. You try saying the thought out loud, molding it and shaping it, trying to find some hidden meaning in this thing that will not leave you alone, though you have no idea what it is. It floats around awkwardly in a conversation, or on the corner of a notebook, or on the back of your hand, wherever you have decided to keep it, with no meaning, no purpose. Eventually, you put it aside, trying to forget it.

Days later, while in class, while reading a book, while washing the dog, while grocery shopping, occupying yourself with other day-to-day, mundane activities, your mind drifts, and in that moment when you are freed from thought, that pesky idea or phrase or whatever it has become at this point, find its way back in. This little seed has found just the moment it needs to grow, and it grows and grows again, sprouting words you never knew you had inside of you.

The words come so quickly, you struggle to remember them all, afraid to forget anything, and you scramble for something to write with. You don’t know how, exactly, but as soon as that pen touches the paper, it’s as if it takes on a life of its own. A story reveals itself to you, and you follow curiously behind your writing, with no idea as to where it will lead you.

You are thrown into a world entirely your own. You may fight as a soldier at war, run away from home, speak a different language, fall in love, or watch the sun rise from a fishing boat in the middle of the ocean. You can never be sure what will happen, until the story is complete. When it is finished, and you look at it again, it has become something beautiful, coloring the entire page with its vibrant abstractness that you found so unbearable only days before. This long, exhausting, irritating, process has resulted in something unique, something that only you could create.

And then, the most incredible part of it all happens when someone new, a stranger to your adventure, reads your story. You watch the reader’s smile rise and fall, their eyes fill with tears, hear them giggle or gasp, see their eyes widen in wonder at a world you have created, at a life that they have lived, because you have given it to them.