He drove
a candy apple red Oldsmobile ninety-eight
and I
waved to him
from the
picture window as he left for work.
He was
always leaving for work,
being at
work, or going to work.
I
wondered what work was.
I never
wanted to go there,
to work,
because
it made my mother sad
and me
lonely.
Across
from my small white house with a green awning
was a playground.
I spent my youth there.
We were
kids with Italian last names
but we
were all Phil Rizzuto hitting home runs
in the summer
and Rocky
Marciano
winning
by a knockout in the fall.
During the long cold winter there were snowmen,
snow angels, snowball fights,
and fantasies
of spring.
I overheard words like leads, bids, and deals.
They all meant the same.
My mother and I would spend
the weekends catching buses to my grandmother's.
If we stayed home
my mother would sit at the end
of the white couch with the gold trim
her eyes dashing between the television and the
picture window
while I played with tiny rubber cowboys
and
plastic blocks
on
the green rug with green swirls.
I learned that work came with after-work
at taverns and bars.
Time
was an ocean of waves
that capsized dreams
and
held
hope hostage.
The seasons changed and the playground disappeared.
My father was a raven among crows.
He drove a Cadillac
and we had a summer home
on the lake.
But the distance between my parents
never mended.
Restless,
I roamed,
wanting to fill the emptiness,
to understand the unspoken vocabulary
inside me.
Sometimes
I was a shoe with a broken heel.
On a few occasions
I excelled
and wore a smile.
I learned daydreams
gave you
the answers
you want,
rarely the truth.
I found friendship and warmth,
even love.
I circled,
nested at times
but I never took flight
among the
blackbirds.
They Are Balloons
They are balloons,
colourful and complete.
Gauzy clouds in the late
afternoon blue sky
are their background
and a peeking sun with a
golden welcoming.
I am a distant figure
changing with perspective
continually failing to
catch up with me
even when the stars say I
have.
The white strings from the
balloons
are wrapped around her
wrist
and it is obvious she is
comfortable
with herself wearing loose
reds and oranges
dismissing the contrast.
She has no shadow
only a late summer
wide-eyed enthusiasm.
She smiles
but not at me.
She smiles
because the wind is
refreshing and the day is lovely
and because she has
balloons
for no reason,
she just has them
and they complement her
mood.
I have a small knife in my
pocket
and not much faith in
myself.
She is happy and I hate
her for not being ambiguous,
because I am confined
within me
while she glides,
glides with her balloons
tied to her wrist.
For me– there is no up or down,
only a rattling of
obstruction
and a clattering of
confusion.
I like things sharp with
no memory.
She is genuine and filled
with delight
animated and alive
like her balloons.
Beyond sheer happiness in
a realm
where multiple balloons
would rather be tied to
her wrist
than travel heavenward.
She has shoulder-length
light brown hair
and round sunglasses,
singing an old song, I
almost recollect.
Her voice is familiar,
I think.
Or is it the voice in my
head I am hearing?
I get closer to her.
I open my knife in my
pocket
confessing my insecurities
while I watch the girl
with balloons tied to her
wrist.
The cheerful girl knows
she is exceptional,
sitting on the soft grass
untangling the balloons.
One by one, she sets them
free.
One by one, the wind
gently sweeps them up
and as one white balloon
becomes trapped in a large
tree's thick branches
I wrap my fist
around the knife's blade
and squeeze.
Nice Phil
ReplyDeleteLove these, especially the first one
ReplyDeleteThese two poems paint such vivid pictures. Moving and beautiful.
ReplyDelete