Rooming with Bev in
Butte
Bev is Wanda the
Woodpecker
with her red curly
hair and spectacles
making me laugh when
I want to cry
as I wing my way
through freezing
temperatures, slick
streets and deep
dangerous mines full
of dynamite.
I am Belinda the
Bumblebee
with golden hair and
black roots
sipping nectar and
making honey
as the new female
reporter in town
while she nurses broken
bones
and hearts in the
hospital
across the road from
the brownstone
where we sleep in
twin beds,
take turns baking
biscuits
and chicken on our
gas stove
and ordering porkchop
sandwiches,
cheeseburgers and
peperoni pizza
on the weekends, when
we drink
Singapore slings and
Grasshoppers
and jitterbug with
miners, businessmen
and boys home from
universities.
When she marries a
tall strapping
Irish Catholic who
works in the mines,
and buys a
three-bedroom house
in Butte, I wing my
way to Washington
California, Mexico
and Canada
followed by her
letters of nurturing a growing
family as she nurses
senior citizens.
On occasional visits,
we laugh, dance
and dine on prime rib
and cheesecake.
Now we are great
grandmothers
married to our
soulmates,
Bev still in Butte
drilling dreams
in the Ponderosa
Pines
and me in Phoenix
winging it
through the desert
sipping sweet
nectar and buzzing
among the saguaros.
Broken Hearts Club
Tawny mane like a
lion,
Leo told me he and his
live-in
Lady Godiva used to
ride
their pet elephant
Ziggy
on Saturdays through
the streets of
Escondido.
After she married a
man
who looked just like
him
and sent him photos
of carbon copy
children
he sold Ziggy and
spent
his weekends at We
Care,
a support group for
those
of us with broken
hearts.
He taught me to laugh
again
while we bowled
strikes,
snuggled in a
sleeping bag
on a Mexican beach,
watched
Bergman movies in San
Diego.
He wept with me,
weaned
me off of sugar and
valium.
But when my broken
heart
was mended, he was
back
at We Care
consoling
a young widow. Commitment
Phobe, my friend says when
we see him at a
foreign film
with his new
rehabilitation
project. She
looks just like you.
The Scottish Country
Rock Band
Summer Saturdays, the
sound
of bagpipes,
harmonica
and acoustical guitar
drift
through the open
window
of the small
apartment
above the bookstore
in Idaho Falls, Idaho
and the elderly
neighbours
grab their cane and
walkers
and listen from their
porches.
As the musicians
march down
the stairs and up the
sidewalk,
the bookstore
customers
pay for their sacks
of books
and race out the
door. Families
at the garage sale on
the corner
buying clothing and
collectibles
join in on the
clapping.
Cars stop and dogs
bark
at the red haired
ruddy faced
farm boy in plaid
kilts and black
boots blowing the
bagpipes,
the Vietnam Vet
wearing
his Army fatigues
playing the harmonica
and my husband in
jeans
and cowboy hat
strumming
his acoustical
guitar.
Social Media Unsavvy
I sign up for
Facebook
to communicate with
grandkids
when they don’t
answer
phones, emails or
texts
because they are too
busy
posting photos,
emojis,
slogans and
expressing
emotions to virtual
friends who speak the
same
language. I find
myself
in a foreign country
feeling
like a spy or a
stalker
and wish we could go
back
to the days when I
exchanged
long letters with my
grandmothers.
I got a chance to
show off
my perfect
penmanship,
on stationery with
flowers
or animals, lick a
stamp
and envelope seal
and mail it at the
post office.
I would check our
mail
box every day after
school
for a perfumed penned
letter
from Montana or Idaho
signed XXX 000
Grandma.
I didn’t even need to
look
at the envelope to
tell
which Grandma was
writing,
The teacher wrote in
cursive
and the high school
dropout
who got married as a
teen
printed in block
letters.
.
Howdy Doody Stranger
My six-year-old great
grandson
climbs in the car of
a stranger
who takes him to
school
and then he tells his
teacher,
Stranger didn’t steal me. Proof
that all the
warnings: Don’t
speak to or go with a stranger
drilled in his head
as often
as the flashing
lights
in the school
crosswalk
are blocked out like
a blast
from a boom box.
In the forties, when
I am six
I accept rides with
strangers
who pull to the side
of the street
because refusing
would be rude
and foolish since the
walk
to school is long and
cold
and windy and my
family
applaud me for being
smart
and social and safe
on streets
where strangers never
snatch
children with Buffalo
Bob
and Howdy Doody in
charge.
Sharon Waller Knutson was born in Montana and worked as a reporter on seven different newspapers in Idaho, Montana, Washington and California. She studied creative writing in Mexico and Canada. She lives in Arizona and has published poems in over fifty online journals as well as ten poetry collections and two forthcoming collections including My Grandmother Smokes Chesterfields (Flutter Press 2014,) What the Clairvoyant Doesn’t say (Kelsay 2021,) Survivors, Saints and Sinners and Kiddos & Mamas Do the Darndest Things (Cyberwit 2022) and The Vultures are Circling (Cyberwit 2023.)
Love the "names" and identities of the Bev/Butte. Sharon is amazing as you can feel/hear her reporting skills with the heart of a poet. Enjoyed these poems.
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