Serve It Up

a sunny March Friday
 juiced with music and art
 divided by a field trip
 pounded by a parent teacher conference
 squeezed between piano and happy hour
 (tea for me please)
 topped off with restaurant and workout
 and the cooling creamy dream
 of mint chocolate chip
 for a sunny side down ending
 to my never ending meal
 
 

Trailing

more than thirty-three miles
 too long for these sedentary legs
 trying to race the sun
 trying to find my way home
 
 with little headwind and my blue-sky view
 Pandora playlist popping me along
 everything should be perfect
 everything should be all right
 
 but rejection trails behind tire spins
 blocking my perfect peak view
 making me regret it again, again
 making me wish i never left
 
 what is it about me that they hate?
 that is the constant question i ask
 trying to find February sun
 trying to be the me they want
 
 

Finally!

relaxing hot springs
 matched with fifty laps and joy
 in mountain escape
 
 

Tears and Joy

doctored up lies
 shot into their arms
 while i hold dirty pamphlets–
 tears and angst spill to the floor,
 betrayed on all fronts
 
 a McDonalds stop is all it takes
 to win second breakfast
 and semi-forgiveness
 (all before the sun breaks noon)
 
 there is no holiday,
 no sleeping in or forgetting that
 tomorrow brings a slew of
 ungrateful teens
 
 just errands, yard work,
 sweeping leaves to
 mid-February winds
 that have just now offered
 a day without snowcover
 
 children who need beds
 that i’ll never afford,
 a makeup piano lesson
 to forgive forgetfulness–
 never, never a break
 
 (until that lesson offers,
 in waning winter sun,
 a circle i make
 around the soft mud trail
 of my youth, found in this park)
 
 and my girls clean the bathroom,
 set the table, chime in,
 prepare the house for grandparents
 and early birthday joy
 
 because even on a Monday
 (holiday or not)
 family is what wakes us at dawn,
 brings tears to the floor,
 and makes our walks worth walking
 
 

Plea Bargain

quit or try harder?
 plague of my life sits waiting
 under setting sun
 
 my daughters beg me
 for a morning to see them
 (no more predawn work)
 
 i try exercise
 to beg love for the body
 that i lost for them
 
 i give up dairy
 and drinking; saying bad things;
 but it’s not enough
 
 time swallowed by plans
 i will never quite finish
 (and ungraded work)
 
 i beg clarity
 from my second (lost) language,
 for tongue-trapped escape
 
 but it’s not enough
 to find that pivotal time
 lost in the shuffle
 
 i beg forgiveness
 from the self i promised me
 twenty years ago
 
 i hope i find it
 hidden in filtered sun rays
 that trickle through time
 
 

Super Bowl Ski

yes, the Broncos won.
 but Rio overcame fear:
 the true victory.
 
 

Snow Holiday

these holiday gifts
in the form of flakes falling
make winter perfect

snow: what’s not to love?
silent city renewal–
few cars venture out

walking on a cloud
block after frosting-white block
to share tea, croissant

a break to catch up
on work, good books, coloring;
everything we need

and yes, a snowgirl
to add to our female fam
carrot nose and all

these “holiday” joys
gifts from some heavenly realm
make life worthwhile

There Are Three Senses

One month in and my senses surround me. Not just sensibility, sensitivity. I am surrounded by the smells, the sounds, the sights present in the world that for so long I only experienced through rose-colored glasses:

Walking along a local business district block, looking for an ATM: At four o’clock, I pass three bars packed with people. Tall glasses of white wine, foaming beers, laughter spilling out onto the sidewalk from the too-warm January patio. And the loud-mouthed couple stumbling across the street.

“She su-ure got you good on that one, didn’t she?” he shouts to her, just two feet away, inside-voice distance.

“Just shut up and get in the car. It’s way too early for the cops to be making their rounds. I’ll take side streets till we get home.”

He struggles to open the door and she slams hers shut with a thunderous thud that breaks through the golden tinge of the setting sun.

Sitting beside my father’s fountain: endless free booze at my fingertips. My football-shaped empanadas being devoured with a nice cold glass of IPA. The smell of beer after beer wafts across the end table as I bear through the intolerable sounds of commercials and crowds that make up a football game. The team wins–another reason to throw back a cold one, to celebrate.

The Saturday night walk down Broadway with the two youngest girls. So much to look at, so much clarity. Pizza dough spun into the air, Uber cars double-parked while waiting for clients to crawl out from under their weekly pub crawl. A crowded ice cream shop where Denverites ignore the impending snowflakes and gorge themselves on wine-infused, beer-infused, whiskey-infused flavors that my girls reject as easily as Brussels sprouts. The chilly, bootless walk back to the car as the flakes increase, the rundown liquor store and, not five feet further, the ominous figure lying half-conscious on the sidewalk, unwilling or unable to move his legs to let us pass. The look in his half-slit shockingly blue eyes: rejection and fear and loathing. The look of someone without a choice.

The morning radio show cracking jokes about how their producer had a once-in-a-lifetime invite to the playoff football game and got so wasted at the tailgating party beforehand that he can’t recall one second of the glorious victory, the plays that make memories, the two-thousand-dollar view. Like it’s funny. Normal. Acceptable Sunday behavior.

The spousal budget discussion, the bill review, the savings goals, and the harsh admittance that easily $200 a month has filled our recycle bin for years. I can still hear the tinny clang of the bottles being dumped, wantonly echoing and overfilling the three-foot-tall bin. Biweekly collection could never quite gather up, or empty out fast enough, the waste found in those bottles.

The memories that flood my thoughts. That time when I said this, wrote that, did … That. The predictive nightmares that fill my nights with giving in, giving up, making the same stupid mistakes.

Did I see these things before? Taste them? Hear the sounds of sobriety, of drunkenness, with such clarity? In those early days of marriage when we scarcely drank, where a bottle of wine given to us as a gift would sit for so long on top of the fridge it would gather dust before we thought to open it? Did I notice the partying that surrounds everyday life for so many people? The weekly, sometimes three-times-weekly happy hours of my colleagues? The fountain of alcohol in my parents’ home? The casual remarks that begin so many stories–“I was lit/wasted/drunk when…”?

Did I have this sense and sensibility before we built up, day by day, a nearly-irreversible pattern? Did I hear, see, taste, smell, FEEL like I do now, one month in?

I can’t quite remember, or I don’t want to fully admit, that the time before and the time after won’t be similar. Like getting married or becoming a parent. There’s no going back. There’s no way I’ll ever be the same.

There’s only sense. Taste. Touch. Smell. Sight. Sound.

And sensibility. Sensitivity.

Sense. Sensibility. Sensitivity. Quite the elixir for a good Austen novel; or, better, the book that will carry me through parties and streets and football games and morning drives with a clarity I never want to lose again.

Staircase

it started with drinks
 that i no longer long for
 now dairy’s gone too
 
 and i’ve bought a scale
 and let Jillian train me
 with killer crunches
 
 i have clear goals now
 (as i squeeze into old pants)
 with clearly laid steps
 
 ’cause downward spirals
 end in winter sunrises
 (my new happy hour)
 
 

Freeze Talk

i want this captured
 to remember this evening
 (dark, icy outside)
 
 not the budget talk,
 the back talk, the endless talk
 sucking life from days
 
 this. this song, this spin,
 this moment of childhood.
 ice the sweet playground
 
 no darkness. no cold.
 warmth found in sisters’ giggles
 that silence all talk.