1973 (Poem 9)
City kid in town of 250 in central Washington
in the shadow of Mt Adams, standing tall to
the westand openness in every other direction that
makes me feel like I can see into tomorrow.
Carport next door sends a tremor through me
as my neighbor stands under one small
electric lightbulb hanging from a cord,
cinnamon colored jacket, admiring
his elk that hangs from a hook
bucket full of its blood.
And everything I’ve known becomes
history as I survey my new surroundings
on the Yakama Indian Reservation,
only teacher that lives in town.
I was hired the day before school started.
A couple weeks earlier had been interviewed
after sleeping next to what I later found was the dump
and put on the sports coat and tie my uncle had given me
that was the job interview attire for both myself and my friends.
Colleen and friend Mike slept out with me and went to
the Wagon Wheel Café while I interviewed. Mike almost got
in a fight because they were charged for his coffee refill.
No doubt whomever was originally hired for my job
found something else at the last minute and it got passed
on to me. I was so clueless that I sat in the back yard of the
small house that the principal directed me to the first night,
overwhelmed by differentness and smoked a joint in this
town where everyone knew everything about everyone else.
But I was just a naïve city kid who’s experience in the world
of small towns was mostly limited to what I found hitchhiking west.
I tried to have my older Native American aide teach the rich knowledge
of their culture she knew to the kids but the administration said no.
After this year I decided to pitch a tipi on Orcas Island and ask the
Universe to provide me a new life direction, which I am so thankful it did.