Rediscovery (An Acrostic, Hour Twenty)

 

Rediscovery

 

Failure

Is hard for me.

Never do I

Dare to accept or admit defeat.

I‘m invincible, right?

Not on your nelly!

Grief has whooped

My arse in

Every way imaginable.

A once in a lifetime love

Gone forever.

An eighteen plus year career

I built by my blood, sweat, and tears is

No more.

All the security and stability

I‘d envisioned for my future was whisked away, leaving

Nothing behind.

Today, I admit defeat,

Establishing myself

As a three time loser just as

Soon as she files the paperwork and makes it official.

Yesterday may have bankrupted me, but tomorrow is a clean slate, a new start.

 

(An acrostic is a poem where the beginning letter of each line, when reading downward, spells out a word, message, or even the entire alphabet. I’ve highlighted each letter in red to make it easier to find the hidden message inside.)

Cruelty (A Lune, Hour Nineteen)

Cruelty

you laugh when I cry

cruelty

my pain, your pleasure

 

 

(A lune is also known as American Haiku and follows the three line format with a syllable count of 5/3/5.)

 

 

 

Dear PaPa (An Epistolary Poem, Hour 18)

Dear PaPa

 

Dear PaPa,

 

I’m sure you didn’t mean it, but you scarred me for life.

When we were little children, we’d climb in the pickup with Daddy

and drive to your house. You kept the pantry full of Little Debbie snacks,

and every time we’d visit, we’d eagerly wait for that magic moment

when you’d smile and turn us loose in the cabinets, allowing us to chow down

on your stash of brownies.

 

When I turned ten years old, battling prepubescent pudge

and already chunkier than all the girls my age, we ventured to your house.

Unwilling to wait for your permission, I asked if I could have a brownie.

Looking me up and down disapprovingly, you sighed, shook your head,

and asked, “Do you really think you need it?”

 

I was crushed. My lifelong struggle with my weight had begun.

 

I remember how every Christmas, you’d give each of us grandkids a crisp new $5 bill.

Until the number of grandkids exceeded the number of dollars you had to spare.

I didn’t understand why the money suddenly stopped.

Didn’t you still love us?

 

Fast forward a few years to somewhere in my teens. Mom and Dad

needed a night out, and feeling unable or unwilling to trust me,

they left us in your care. Watching TV with you, we passed out on the couch.

Believing we were asleep and the coast was clear,

you changed the channel to a raunchy boob flick,

Private School.

Pretending to doze off, I placed a pillow over my face,

turned my head to the side, and secretly watched through the crack,

thinking you were none the wiser.

 

Until I felt you pull the pillow from my face,

sigh and shake your head.

“If you’re gonna watch it, you may as well sit up and watch it.”

Embarrassed beyond measure once again,

I awkwardly did as you said. 

You were the grown up, so if you said something, it had to be right.

Right?

 

December 1992.

Dad drove to your house to check on you, then called home in a panic.

He couldn’t wake you up. They rushed you to the hospital up the road.

The family came and went, all hours, day and night. Dad refused to leave you,

and I refused to leave his side. The next sixty some odd hours are a blur, traces of faces

and voices, trails of shared laughter and tears. The last time Dad and I went back to see you,

I didn’t know what to say. I saw my Daddy cry, which he never did,

as he held one of your hands and I held the other.

He said his “I love you” and I squeezed your hand silently,

hoping you knew I meant the words he spoke,

I simply had no strength to utter them.

A single tear fell from your eye.

 

That’s the last thing I remember.

 

I’m so sorry….

I never said I love you,

or I forgive you.

Or even thank you,

for the many things you taught me in life,

both good and bad;

for creating my father,

making him the man he is,

who in turn made me the woman I have become:

a lover, a fighter,

a stubborn headed survivor.

 

I love you, PaPa.

 

 

(An epistolary poem is simply a letter written to someone or something. It can be serious or humorous or both.)

Dandelion (A Shadorma, Photo Prompt, Hour Seventeen)

Dandelion

Some see a

wish, some see a weed.

Me? I see

tiny white

arms, reaching out for us as

they blow by.

 

 

(This is the photo provided in the prompt that I chose to write about. A shadorma is a six line poem with a syllable count of 3/5/3/3/7/5.)

On Life and Diabetes (Hour Sixteen)

On Life and Diabetes

 

Unzipping my case,

I fumble for my meter.

Staring solemnly

at the series of small callouses

gracing every digit on my left my hand,

it dawns on me:

my life IS diabetes.

 

Too many times each day,

I poke myself,

seeking the level of glucose

flowing through my veins.

 

Each test leaves behind a scar,

so tiny the naked eye might miss it,

yet so bold it feels like Braille

beneath a blind man’s fingers.

 

If my sugar runs high,

I must inject myself with insulin,

restoring the natural order of things.

 

Should my levels be low,

I must feed my face,

building blocks like protein to

preserve my strength.

 

I constantly check my ’emotional glucose’ meter too.

 

Through pricks and barbs who poke and prod,

I discover where my sweetness levels fall.

Every puncture point leaves its mark

in my memories,

its scars upon my heart.

 

If I’ve been too kind and caring,

left myself wide open and vulnerable,

it’s time to serve up a shot of cynicism,

and remember

that the world doesn’t love

the same way that I do.

 

If I’ve lost my sweet edge

and ventured to the sour side,

I must feast on love and laughter,

and the follies of furry four-footed friends

until all is right with the world once more.

 

Should I choose not to check

and let ignorance be bliss,

I know I’ll not survive.

 

Diabetes or Life?

 

Either way,

you prick me and I bleed.

Sticks and Stones (Mirror Hay(na)ku, Hour Fifteen)

Sticks and Stones

 

Words

penetrate flesh,

piercing my heart.

 

My mouth moves.

I scream.

Silence.

(A hay(na)ku poem is composed of three lines, the only rule being one word in the first line, two words in the second, and three words in the last line. A reverse hay(na)ku is three lines where the first line is three words, the second is two, and the last line is one word. I compiled the two styles together and created the mirror hay(na)ku… assuming someone out there hasn’t already beat me to it!)

You and I (Diamante, Hour Fourteen)

You and I

 

YOU

angry, bitter

hurting, screaming, fighting

man, warrior……woman, nurturer

crying, loving, writing

compassionate, tender

ME

 

 

(A diamante consists of seven lines: line one (A) and seven (G) must be nouns and opposites. Line two is two adjectives that clearly describe Noun A; line six is two adjectives describing Noun G. Line three is composed of three -ing verbs that describe Noun A, and line five is made up of three -ing verbs that describe Noun G. Line four, the middle line, ties the poem together by featuring two concrete nouns about Noun A …. followed by two concrete nouns about Noun G.)

Father and Daughter (A Somonka, Hour Thirteen)

Father and Daughter

 

Heavenly Father,

I praise Your name and thank you

for amazing grace

and Your love, so undeserved.

You are my Savior.

 

Sweet Mandi, my child,

I loved you before you knew me.

Let not your heart be

troubled. I will not forsake

you; Be-lov-ed, you are mine.

(A somonka is a pair of tankas from two different voices that carry a central theme of love. It can be romantic, platonic, brotherly, sibling, from a parent to a child, etc. Each tanka is composed of five lines with a 5/7/5/7/7 syllable count.)

Dear Freckle Face (A Letter to My Former Selves, Hour Twelve)

Dear Freckle Face

(A Letter to My Former Selves)

 

To the six-month-old hardhead

who felt the need to prove your independence

by crawling off Grandma Peggy’s mattress

and connecting with the hardwood headfirst…..

being first at everything isn’t always a good thing.

 

To the freckle-faced, four-eyed first grader,

so proud to pedal that little pink bicycle

all the way home

all by yourself

in the bitter winter cold,

then fling it into the yard in frustration

once you reached your destination….

remember home is the place where when you have to go there, they have to take you in.

 

To the geeky seventh grader

from the wrong side of the tracks,

so full of unwarranted anger and desperate for acceptance

she once snorted a packet of Sweet ‘n Low

and set her nose on fire for days trying to build this badass persona….

it’s okay to be young and stupid, but it’s just as okay to be yourself.

 

To the angsty high school junior

who fell in love for the first time,

had her first awkward kiss,

broke up with her boyfriend and swore the world

must be coming to an end

and her heart would never heal….

he was the first, not the last. There will be others.

 

To the young lady away at college

and living on her own for the first time,

ready to take on the world,

thinking she knew it all…

with education comes knowledge, but with experience comes wisdom.

 

To the chubby grungy redhead

wearing flannel and sneakers,

with a Bud Light in one hand and

a Marlboro in the other….

look to your left. See that young man in the wheelchair?

He will change your life forever, in ways you could never comprehend. Give him a chance.

 

To the twenty-year-old newlywed,

wondering what to say to your husband who was just wheeled into the room

after losing his right leg…

it doesn’t really matter. With cracked lips and dry mouth, he kisses your face and sobs.

All he wanted was to know you were there.

 

To the weary-eyed thirtysomething woman

who sits steadfastly at his bedside,

holding his hand and stroking his flat head,

feeling your heart break as you listen to his ragged breaths

fall fewer and further between,

as you whisper “I love you” and tell him it’s time….

this isn’t goodbye. He will always be a part of you. You wouldn’t be you if it weren’t for him.

 

To the middle-aged widow

who has struggled to move forward for seven years,

but has tried to rediscover her purpose,

in spite of the obstacles Life has thrown her way…..

Even baby steps show movement.

You got this girl. Never forget you’re a survivor!

Winged Heart (A Haiku, Hour Eleven)

Winged Heart

 

with wings on your arm

you wear your heart on your sleeve

so permanently

 

 

***This is an actual photo of my first tattoo. I got it in memory of my late husband Rickey, who suffered from multiple medical issues which resulted in him losing both his feet before he passed. When our niece Merenda explained to her six-year-old daughter Trystan that Rickey had passed and was in Heaven now, Trystan got excited and exclaimed, “Uncle Rickey has feet AND wings now!” which moved me to the point of making that the basis for my tattoo. But earlier today when talking with my mother and sharing my marathon poems with her, she mentioned how the tattoo was truly meant for me because I have always worn my heart on my sleeve as well, and it struck a chord with me.***

 

(A haiku is a three line poem with a syllable count of 5/7/5.)