Precious Metals, Sparkling Gems

a path paved in gold
 leads to an opal lake view
 elemental win
 
 

Spring Back to Fall Forward

finally a break
 if only for a weekend
 to soak up autumn
 
 

Deceptive Beauty

sweet November day:
 a rose-colored paradox,
 seasoned dysfunction
 

Disentrapment

trapped all day:
 sickness crept in before dawn,
 stole our mountain hike
 
 vacation research
 occupied my time and mind
 till she felt better
 
 then, on to pumpkins!
 (Halloween looms behind scars
 we cut year by year)
 
 and scout redemption:
 we glued on our troop numbers
 to make this dream true
 

Out on a Limb

just like this poor limb
 reaching from the grave for life
 our Girl Scout dream ends
 

WTF

“What the fuck–?!” She shoots a dirty look across the room, in the same space I have been standing watching with my own eyes as I monitor their ability to read sentences, their ability to respond to questions. “What did you throw?”

I have seen nothing. Not a speck, not a spitball, not an airplane.

“Can you tell me what—?” I begin, and am harshly interrupted by her friend whose phone I took away yesterday, who argued with me and cussed at me and told me that I should give her my phone if I was going to take hers, who said I don’t pay her bills and have no right to her property–“So you’re gonna ask her about what happened when he’s the one who did it?”

“I’m trying to figure out what happened. F, can you tell me?”

But before she can answer, all I hear is, slightly under her breath but loud enough so she knows I hear it, “Yeah, that’s right, she’s a racist.”

I call the boy outside, a boy who has sat in my class for two years and has never allowed a cruel word to cross his lips, and ask him about throwing the paper, which he adamantly denies, but I can hardly hear his response as I am already swimming in a pool of tears that sits just behind my eyelids, ready to fall loosely down into the hole that is this day.

Because I either say the wrong thing or make the wrong choice or don’t say anything at all, and none of it is ever right. Because I spend my life trying to be fair to all of my students, to all of the people in my life, even when they are not fair to me.

Because sometimes it feels like nothing I do will ever bring positivity, love, friendship, or trust into my life.

Because I was already crying before this class even began. After two months of planning, paperwork, training, money, and time, before we’ve even had a single meeting, my Girl Scout co-leader has just informed me that her daughters don’t want to do Girl Scouts and therefore, neither does she.

Because I promised my daughters that we could do this after a four-year break.

Because I’m terrible at making friends, and I feel like it is multi-generational, as my girls have struggled in recent weeks to click with her daughters despite the last three years of friendship. And I wanted to bridge that gap between the girls and their old friends and the mother who has warmed up to me, and build a foundation for something that could last for years.

Because I don’t have the right words, when I’m standing there watching a kid cuss in my class or at happy hour telling people what I really think, to do anything more than make people hate me.

“R, you don’t have your tablet today, do you need the paper copy of the book?” I try, several minutes later, a pathetic attempt at peace.

“Don’t even try to talk to me, Miss.”

Don’t even try.

Because, why should I? I got married when I was twenty years old and made my husband the center of my entire life. And whenever I try to reach outside of that safe bubble I built up for myself, I am misjudged, blamed, ostracized.

Because, the truth is, he is my one and only friend. And when I get a text at lunch as I’m walking around the gray-eyed dressed-up-for-autumn park, I have no one to share my sad news with once I arrive back to my school.

I have no one to call to talk through it.

No one but him.

And I spend so many moments of my days worrying that my daughters will face the same fate, the same insecurities as they enter adulthood. Which is exactly why I wanted to start the Girl Scout troop in the first place–to help them make and continue their friendships. “Make new friends, but keep the old, one is silver and the other’s gold…” The tune of the song will forever be emblazoned on my soul.

Yet, no matter how hard I have tried, people have left my life for one “circumstantial” reason after another. And once they leave, they leave an abscess that I pathetically try to fill with a new set of… friends. Colleagues? Girls’ friends’ parents? Bueller? Bueller?

This is me, standing in front of my class, trying to hold together another day of teaching, another day of being a mother, a wife, another day of trying, and failing, to be a friend. And I may as well be the monotonous voice that no one listens to, searching in the dark for something that was never there in the first place.

Because I have heard nothing. Not a speck, not a word, not an offer. And I want to be like that brazen 14-year-old and shout out, “What the fuck?”

Only. I want an answer. Not a scapegoat.

Here We Go Again

our first troop outing
 fall colors, shimmering lake:
 friendships arrive soon
 
 

The Last Conference

at conferences she swings her legs
 back and forth, swish… kick
 and murmurs her replies,
 her set-to-be bragging portfolio of pride
 melted into a subtle acceptance
 of just good enough
 
 and with all eight eyes on her
 she hears the same words
 she’s heard for six years:
 Talk more.
 (when all the world is a whirlwind of noise
 and she has the quiet demeanor of one who always listens,  always knows)

 
 and the rims of her eyes redden
 after hearing the judgey truth too many times, and before a word escapes
 her last-year-in-elementary lips,
 they’re telling her not to cry.
 
 they beg us then for questions, concerns,
 wanting to fill in the ten minute gap that hangs like a carcass between us,
 but my words are swallowed too,
 behind my own quiet tears,
 my own red-rimmed eyes,
 and all i can hear is Scout’s voice
 proclaiming that school is a lesson in Group Dynamics,
 and my girl, my baby, doesn’t fit into that mold.
 
 instead we fill the hallway with sing-song voices
 to banter with her older sister,
 one year ahead and one million years mouthier,
 and my tears melt and her eyes soften and we move on.
 
 we step into the cold autumn night and she clings to each of our hands, unwilling to pull away,
 her last-year-of-elementary heart still as soft as six years back,
 still my little girl trying to find her place in this whirlwind world.
 
 

Saturday Night Fever

on Saturdays we cut out grass
 and bend bits of metal
 and win medals in Tae Kwon Do
 and watch weird episodes of a modern drama
 while the oldest babysits
 and oh how our life has changed
 from changing diapers to ours changing diapers
 
 and we go to bed hours after
 the joy of slipping off clothes
 to slide into fleece pajamas
 with kittens in our laps
 and just love love love
 that we. can. relax.
 
 

For Change’s Quake

this day, three years back:
 an unfair observation
 on a testing day.
 
 i thought i was done;
 trying to be good enough
 was just not enough
 
 and now? full circle–
 a grapevine request to see
 my expert teaching
 
 from a district head
 who saw just minutes of us
 (speaking for us all).
 
 now he’s bringing guests
 to show others how it looks
 to teach ELD
 
 (the irony stings
 with my facebook memory–
 a harsh reminder)
 
 but all things must change
 from weak saplings to gold leaves
 that have brought me home