Tuesday, March 8, 2011
City Life
Sticky School Bus Bench
I was old enough to know better
But too young to acknowledge my ignorance
Intended as a joke for my neighbor
On that sticky school bus bench
The day I say nigger
Self-indulgent laughter is the pin dropping
Vinny Foster tells me I oughta be punched
I wince away the sting until
The hum of my peers resumes
Because I said the n-word
I avoid controversy, step on no toes
I will not be the reason someone must
Gaze out the smeared windows and cry silently.
Maybe, again, that will be me.
Cheating
Her hair is as tight as her stomach
Vultures swarm the neighboring tables
A sign of what is to come at her own
These men, they sit at desks
All day and this is their reward-
A white tablecloth and chardonnay
A lavish tip they’re sure to announce
She cheats. She looks at his menu
And then at his.
Order something cheaper
Don’t talk
Don’t finish the glass
You’ll be fine.
Faux Pas
I gave pause
To Ma and Pa
I fight
Feelings are foe
I forfeit, fall, and
Find fondness
I ponder
what does it mean-
Faux Pas?
She Took Her Medicine
My brother pinned her ankles to the floor
She could fight no more, palm wrapped over mouth
I heard the pills rattle against her teeth
She squirmed but I knew I had to hate her
I recalled times she could not lock the door
A pale ass thrusted into my mothers’
The pale ass never belonged to my dad
She moaned but she would not cooperate
At a young age I scanned the crowd distraught
My games were never as important as
Minimum wage to feed sister and me
Her muscles relaxed and the pills were gone
I lessened my hold and reeled in my hate
Remembered times she wiped tears and kissed scrapes
The regret when she explained the divorce
They say she’ll be fragile without the meds
It takes all her strength just to get them down
I can’t let go of the things she’s done wrong
She told me one day I’d be big and strong
Dark, Bleeding Eyes
And settle somewhere around his middle.
His breath is cool in a long sigh of relief
Knowing he’s solved me like a child’s riddle.
His pupil bleeds into his dark brown eyes
Look how often his nostrils flare
I know where I’ve put myself is unwise
My heart races like I’m in some kind of dare
I’ve fallen in love time and time again
Yet this is the first who wasn’t straight
This is the proof that a heart can mend
I see a lifetime after just one date
He says, Keep this secret – the world can’t know
Just another in denial, looking for a blow
SHOELACES & EVERYTHING
For the first time since we moved.
Before he left I asked him to
“Tell me a little about your friend.”
My son was peeved by the inquiry,
but skateboard in hand,
helmet strapped on,
and new skater shoelaces tied too tight
he told me about the friend.
This young man’s name was Zack,
and that’s Zack with a K.
He was so cool, I learned, and
“He is good at, like, everything.”
One shouldn’t have to ask
for a definition of “everything,”
but with a nine year old,
everything
is really nothing at all.
Zack could skateboard and bike
like the guys on TV
and was VIP in every sport
but his best was basketball.
That was everything.
I wanted to say, “Son,
it’s not worth it,
pretending to be someone you’re not.”
For I knew the reason he tied his shoes
with two knots
was because he had not learned
it was cooler to just tuck the laces in.
But instead I handed him a helmet and asked,
“If it’s not too much trouble,
would you mind wearing this?”
Monday, March 7, 2011
Dance on Graves REVISED
DANCE ON GRAVES
You, oh teacher who knows no weary soul, let your students dance on graves. This is their reward for not making your headache any worse than it already was – permission to turn the cemetery into a playground. These are the men who fought and those who died and those who had no direction and thought Why not pick up a gun? You treat history like it doesn’t matter, and perhaps you are right, except that you are here.
You are here to reward children for mediocrity. This job, where you pour into lives of young ones, is nothing to you but a victory lap for the thousands Daddy paid to have you to drink and drug your way through four years of school. You will go home in hopes of making love to your husband, who might as well have been prearranged, even though he hasn’t touched you there in months.
The day is fast approaching where your complete disregard for the soldiers in those graves and your daddy nearing his is going to catch up with you. And you will repent. And you will likely divorce. Then you will repent for that as well, but I digress. Soon you will not reward students not for their ability to keep their mouths shut, but for the contributions they make that expand not only their knowledge, but your own.