Acrophobia

(Just realized this one never uploaded)

When FDR declared the nation had only fear to fear,
He never had a gun to his head,
Ballistaphobia
never had a cobra hood opened at his bare legs
Ophidiaphobia
or strolled past the body of a jumper from a Manhattan 32 story high rise,
Necrophobia
the thump of the fall nearly lifting my feet off the ground.

But it wasn’t then that acrophobia hit.
No, it was the carefree days of carnivals and Ferris wheels,
Free from regulations and safety straps, not even for seats
That turned upside down with the slow-turning wheel.
I was five and my car mates were nine and ten, measurably
Larger, taller than I so that the metal bar kept them in as
The wheel spun us upside down and then right side up,
Me clutching with all my strength to keep myself inside.

Thanatophobia. I had never heard the word in my five years,
But I lived my way through it many times since.

I should be alone

It’s five in the morning, I should be alone,

the only one up in this house,

as I finish what I started twenty-four hours ago,

this poetry marathon, a sleepless creative

hell of my own making, only because I have

to work in two hours and then fry myself on

a soccer field after that, ah but sleep.

She’s just around the turned corner of the morning.

But who do I hear creaking the floorboards above me?

It’s she who sometimes doesn’t sleep at night.

The insomnia came after the concussion, that kick

in the head just over one year ago.

I saw her asleep at eight, while I was on poem fourteen.

I’m not surprised to hear her stomp, stomp, pull open

a drawer, stomp, stomp, and plop into her squeaky bed.

I had forgotten how quiet the night was in my room

when she was away at college up north playing soccer.

But at this hour, this sacred sleep hour when no one

arises or goes to bed, I lay in my bed, IPad propped on

my naked belly, the screen’s light, casting a shadow on

the ceiling while the fan blows white noise about me,

and struggle through the last “poem” of this marathon,

the final, number twenty-four, for which I am thankful.

A Room

A room in this old house, holds history–

mine, yours ours and theirs.

This room is where I sleep nights;

it’s where I awaken each day to

slatted light from vertical blinds

that open to a window laden with

orange tree leaves and ripened

fruit, the color of the sun setting

on the Pacific not more than a mile

from this very room in this home.

 

Its cornflower blue walls contain

my thoughts and prayers, my

ujjayi breath, sometime despair.

This oaken floor steadies my

bare feet, wears my yoga mat,

including the cat on top who

skrick scratches her claws in it.

 

But it wasn’t always my cave;

it belonged to others before me.

Two nieces slept here, the last

who chose the wall colors, and

the one before who now sleeps

in my parents’ home, while they

sleep in mine now, in their room,

which used to be the play room

for loud television shows and toys

and kool aid colored couches for

friends to jump on and destroy.

 

And before that, it was the bedroom

my husband designed and had built

by a friend who charged too much and

stole his baby grand piano on pretext.

And before it was our bedroom, where

our children were conceived and I

labored in our big blue sunken jacuzzi

tub beneath the bay window and lime

stone tiles surrounding the midnight blue,

it was an office converted from a garage,

where his business began selling hardware,

which eventually turned to software and an

office elsewhere, which he sold to find

more fulfilling work, which he still seeks.

 

But when my parents moved in, we moved

the bed, desk, dresser, night table and lamps

into my room, the room I share with no one

except the dog, a few cats and the constant

turnstile traffic of inquirers and visitors living

in and outside the house, my room, the hub,

with its Picasso print of woman-dove face in

black and white, who resembles my oldest

daughter even though I bought that print

twenty years before her birth, and now that

she’s twenty herself, she tattooed that face

on her left arm, just like it appears on my

bedroom wall, above the hand painted

poster that asks, “Is there no way out of the

mind?”, purchased and overpriced by a

friend of my daughter’s who painted and

sold it to me after she returned from rehab.

 

And the Van Gogh with the gilt frame, huge

hanging above my bed, well that was a gift

from my nephew when he was only 23, and

he knew I loved art and so wrapped this big

old Starry Night print and gave it to me, so

that’s why it’s there framed above my head,

garish and cliché but sentimentally stationed.

 

Because my room holds pictures of my girls,

and a fan that cools me summers and a

heater that warms me winters, and dozens

of ceramic boxes and knick knacks and the

remains of my jewelry box, what wasn’t

stolen by someone who knew the dog

well enough not to get bitten as an intruder.

 

This room holds hours of frustration, and

ideas, poems and graded essays, years of

reading and writing, drawing, coloring and

crocheting, fretting and forgetting, crying

and laughing, the entire history of a house,

its inhabitants, furnishings, we call home.

At the Diner

At the diner at 4 a.m.,

cheesecake and coffee

the brew so dusty sweet

and the cake real ricotta.

At the diner, we’d talk

after the bars close

and the beer wore off,

and eat French fries

or eggs and put dimes

in the table top juke box,

hear our favorite songs

like Free bird and

Sympathy for the Devil.

And we’d splay our

legs on long, red, vinyl

seats sometimes cracked,

our backs against booth

walls of plastic sheen.

At the diner, we’d hum

the songs we heard at the

bar we just left, our favorite

local bands playing, while

we drank Heineken and

smoked Camel cigarettes,

out back for a J or two.

But under the bright lights

of the diner til quarter to 7 or

later, we’d laugh sometimes

spitting our coffee or Pepsi

at some stupid shit one of us

said, and everything’s funny

when you haven’t slept all night.

At the diner, off the expressway,

the waitresses know us, and

bring us our eggs and toast

the way we like them, sunny

side up and easy tan and grape

jelly in the little plastic peel off

boxes, three or four of them.

And every Friday and Saturday

it was the same for us three,

Deb, Jackie and me, at the diner.

Dear John

Dear John:

You’ve told me a man must have everything.

He must have her love and affection, trust

and cares, woes and fantasies, body and belief.

He must contain and compel her dreams, speak

her mind with her, beside her and be her too.

He must have her body, entirely his own, as she

equally partakes of his, fully accessible any time.

He must give her solace and she his support.

They must build things and break things down,

together, working as a team, united as one.

There must be abundant love everlasting, you say,

and undying even beyond death and delivery.

John, you’ve claimed possession of her opinions,

her bodily secretions, and her style of clothing.

You’ve demanded her attention and hands, her

movements during the day and night, her arms

ever clasping yours, enveloping you enveloping her…

Dear John, my dearest of all, love can’t be swapped

and traded, quantified and qualified, bought and sold.

Love is no cure, can’t fill the gaps, cracks or ailments,

not those inherent or fostered in the care of those who

thought love was power and hurt and discipline and

control, John, mere control that fear spills through you.

Love is not for keeps, never on sale, bundled or peddled.

Especially, love is not had but kindled, like wood fires

warmth and sustenance, dazzling and mysterious, in

properties known and magical too. Love has no rules.

John, let me, if you will, teach you all I know about love.

Love–

Urban Forest

Artwork-by-Kevin-Peterson-9

Urban jungle, yes literally, not metaphorically,

though maybe more like a ghetto forest.

Leading the determined coalition, is one sleek fox,

low lying, white tipped tail, like a log on legs.

Following fellow fox is great black bear, also

in forceful forward motion, head level, purpose

in his gait and onward gaze, alongside the girl.

She, decked in tartan plaid skirt, red cap

and sweater, strides along friend bear

among the graffiti’d concrete landscape

peppered with spare thin trees, once patterned

for park pleasure seekers and outdoor fun.

In ruins now, no one in the neighborhood

respects the land, so the conservationists

have taken up extreme measures for the cause:

the children and the animals, who will inherit

the earth when the mature of the human species

go extinct, march forth to the city council meeting

to state their piece: “Who will speak for the trees

and the bees before they’re completely gone?”

Have a Nice Day

When I came to California, a gruff New Yorker,

well nigh 38 years plus change ago,

the first time I heard, “Have a nice day!” from

a super market clerk after I had purchased

a loaf of bread, a jar of peanut butter and milk,

I thought to myself, “What the actual fuck?!”

I had no idea what she was up to or what she meant.

And then I heard it everywhere, “Have a nice day,”

said the ice cream store clerk and the sandwich shop

cashier and even the gas station attendant.

I thought I had landed on some spooky, sticky planet

of gooey good cheer, totally fake and reflexive.

So now, much more accustomed to the saying,

as common as “Where should we go to eat? Or

did you finish your homework?”, I jokingly reply,

“Don’t tell me what to do! I have authority issues,” and

I wink, the closest I can come to a smiley faced emoticon.

Gerenuk

Sipping a Rasputin stout,

hoping for animal inspiration,

I watched the household pet,

a Japanese bobtail cat leap

from four-paw standing to

mid-air leap on a moth quest.

She stood tall on two paws

her ears spread wide apart

with aggravated intent.

image

She looked like a gazelle

and a giraffe, tall and swift;

then I remembered the zoo,

when I braved the school bus,

field trip mom amid 3rd graders.

 

An African gerenuk, goofball

of the Savannah, big eared,

whistle mouth, tongue clicker

that stood hind leg tall in the

branches seeking choice leaves.

image

While the cheetahs and lions

drew the crowds, the tree

dancer oddity, half breed

or so it seemed, of flight

and height, panic and poise

stole my attention, ever the

soft touch for the under dog.

 

And hard as I tried to bring

the children to her windowed

habitat, they didn’t understand.

“That’s weird,” my own daughter

declared, and I contented myself,

alone in my fascination for freaks,

to have learned about this wonder.

First Cut

Perhaps my father was the first,

with his absence,

except for the rare storms from his daytime slumber

to terrorize us into quiet so he could sleep.

I once got caught in the cross fire of his flying hands.

I was not yet 3.

My older sisters squealed and screamed him awake.

But I was too naive to run.

Before that, he was the myth my mother made us believe

about fatherhood and tender love.

 

But the one I can summons from memory caves

was the gorgeous boy

with the ass long shiny silk brown hair

and tan flawless skin sunk into Italian brown eyes.

I was 13 and he 15.

He paid me attention, walked with me at night

on a quiet moon-lit road named Candlewood as we

murmured our intentions, our future married selves

–or I did.

I couldn’t believe he was interested in me, a brainy

average-looking girl with the wrong kind of hair–

refusing to hang long from a middle combed part.

 

And a week after that walk under the old gibbous moon,

when I told him I wanted to marry a bodily lover,

he failed to appear, non-responsive, ghosted–

and I cried the cliché with a painful heart, torn

and scorned, never to be stabbed the same again,

my pillows my week-long companions in sob-town.

 

Though others made Caesar of my heart, dagger

hurlers and stabbers, I remember them vaguely.

Not like that first cut, the baptismal soul’s sarcophagus.

 

Ten Years Ago I Wanted to Pierce My Nose

image

Ten years ago I wanted to pierce my nose

but I joined a firm instead.

My partners thought it wild,

clashing with the cobalt blue seriousness

of our office walls and wisdom.

So I waited til I left the firm to pierce my nose.

My daughters had theirs pierced by then.

Yet I caved in to pressure in the last minute:

it will jeopardize your reputation, and

the outcome of your case

may be prejudiced, prejudged, predetermined

by another’s preconceived notions

about piercings and morals and drugs,

noise like that, which I know is just bull shit.

But I chickened out, and now my nose

has grown long with age, and the piercing

would not look right wedged between wrinkled

doubt and oily regrets oozing from gaping pores.

I’ve made a mess of this decision.

Has it been ten years since I wanted to pierce my nose?