Follow Your Inner Voice

finally the talk
 (though teen truth is not revealed)
 but i’ll work on her
 
 
 

Flakes Fell

last night light flakes fell
 to make a snow-bright morning
 (soul slightly renewed)
 
 i drove in silence
 not able to think of words
 that she’d understand
 
 the unspoken sat
 between us like the car crash
 we saw just later
 
 she spoke and screamed out
 (firemen swarmed the panic
 of woman on phone)
 
 (i still had no words
 nothing about the late night,
 her sneaking downstairs)
 
 (nothing on found phone
 retrieved in secret to watch
 the blossoms of lust)
 
 just sadness, light flakes
 falling from the winter sky
 crashing our morning
 
 so we said goodbye
 (i gave her my hat and gloves.
 she gave me a grin.)
 
 (till midday flakes fell
 then the sun burned all to mush
 thoughts still unspoken)
 
 
 

Los Molinos

finally finished
 ready to send on its way
 to a hopeful life
 
 


on my winter walk
 to the store for its framing
 city windmills spun
 
 


semi-frozen lake
 with geese searching snow for grass
 i clocked three miles
 
 the girls took friendjoy
 and kitten-lap-book cuddles
 to carve our Tuesday
 
 


(yet–there was a hole–
 chicken noodle in crockpot,
 rolls ready to bake)
 
 he worked late again
 and bore the winter ride home
 no windmills in sight

Song, Sing a Song

smallest singing songs
 while middle child gets left
 by lazy teacher
 
 add to “redo” lunch
 (they again ran out of food)
 our grammar school blues
 
 but there’s still music
 in the lives of my children
 when we arrive home
 
 they play clapping games
 chase grins on their way to bed
 sing sorrows away
 
 

A Simple Relinquishment

i took back her phone
 she cried for thirty minutes
 then emerged from room
 
 a week has now passed
 i’ve seen her face more this week
 than in the past year
 
 she’s on page fifty
 of a novel she started…
 to write, not to read!
 
 she plays piano
 taught herself Star Wars theme songs
 Darth Vader and all
 
 she talks to us now
 and plays games with her sisters
 just like a child
 
 she is my child
 and i’ve ended the battle
 that would lead to war
 
 

The Blaring Results Of…

The fire alarm went off just after the minute bell, thirty seconds before finals were to start. I had already arrived early enough to stand in line and sign out my district final. I had taken the time to organize them name by name on every other desk, ready for the students to walk in, find their place, and write their best essay of this semester.

When the alarm blared into our ears, I told the kids what door to walk out. I grabbed my coat, ready to wrap some warmth around this December Monday. I locked my classroom door, thinking about the security of the tests.

And I entered the line. The students-ready-to-give-up line. The teachers-wondering-if-there’d-be-enough-time-now-for-finals line.

And in their arms, like infants ready to suckle? Tight against their chests like their lives depended upon the survival of a few stacks of lined booklets?

Their district finals.

“Where are your tests? Did you leave them in your room??”

Like I had committed a cardinal sin.

And this moment, more than any other, is why I think our society has completely fallen apart. No way our school, our city, our fire department would plan a fire drill the Monday morning moment before finals would begin.

So this could be REAL. We could be walking out of our school into a bitter cold standstill for hours as we wait for the beautiful firemen to rush five blocks in their blaring white truck to SAVE OUR LIVES.

And I left, God forbid, the tests in that damn room.

(Of course it was an error. Of course they were doing construction in the gym that set off the alarm. Of course they adjusted our schedule, making the day twenty minutes longer than planned, cutting into our lunch, our grading time, our collection of children from school, forcing us to stand in line again, forcing our children to stand like common prostitutes on the corner because their mother couldn’t arrive on time, all because of the security of that damn test.)

Of course I’ll give up my planning period tomorrow to catch up.

But I will not carry that test like it’s my baby. I have enough babies. Three of my own and thousands more. Their words are worth more than what the district (the society) asked them to write in sixty minutes. Their lives are worth more than the security of this test.

Our lives are worth more than the security of a TEST.

Someday, I hope, we will realize this.

Fulfilled

even though i work
 i’m blessed with housewife duties
 on weeks off from school
 
 our yearly bake fest
 produced three minis, five pies
 hard to beat this day
 
 while rolling out crust
 that we shaped so perfectly
 they giggled, measured
 
 but we all know best:
 it’s not the crust that makes pies–
 love’s in the filling
 
 

Stewed

beef stew takes some time
 to simmer while we have fun
 discovering home
 
 (it sits in sunlight
 on a late November day
 waiting to be found)
 
 in stage selections
 and modern airport hotels
 where we say goodbye
 
 it waits for new doors
 open to ideas of
 a sunlit autumn
 
 in our house, our home
 where thanksgiving starts and ends
 all that matters: here
 
 

My RioIsLove

she turns eleven
 drama sits on morn’s doorstep
 yet she cries so well
 
 you’re almost convinced
 you’ve met an Oscar winner
 (perhaps someday… yes)
 
 until then? she’s apes
 for her newest birthday gifts
 Grandma, Grandpa win
 
 competition? no
 just a constant lost battle
 to be what she wants
 
 ice cream brownie end
 the day that marks her entrance
 into my world
 
 couldn’t taste better
 than the likes she shares with me
 my middle, my love
 
 

Sleepover Chronicles

building challenges
 hermit crab obstacle course
 get ready to win
 


pancake characters
 make Sunday Funday better
 Yoda one for me
 


but blue, best of all:
 skies to steal mountain town, hike–
 like soft spun taffy