Brink

I remember the smell and feel
of that pink bathrobe better than
the faces of friends I’ve lost. Pilled
polyester. The seams scratched, plastic
fishing line sewn in melted after
decades in a gas dryer.

I wanted it willed to me.

I can see it sitting, propped in
the recliner in memories where I cannot
even see my mother.

Brink pink.

She called it her Pink Panther bathrobe,
swinging the tie like a tail. Thick cuffs
pushed back to show thick forearms,
her hands stronger than any man’s
I’d ever seen.

It must have been plush once, to have
been pulled off the rack.

I can see the matted sleeves more clearly
than my son’s infant face.

She wore it every morning and every night.
If I was sick or sad, I could wear it, a pink
aura to prove I mattered. It dragged
the floor until I was nine.

She only wore it sober.

She was as gentle as the robe hoped
it could be while she wore it. She sang
songs and read books and did silly
voices. She made soup for fevers
and warmed milk for sleepless nights.
She held me and rocked me, my face
buried in pink, smells of cheap cigarettes
and mint chewing gum and Obsession.

I wanted it willed to me.

When it hung in the closet, the dice
were rolled. Our trailer became the setting
for violent mad libs come to life,
fueled by Natural Light. Whole years
it hung in the dark. No stories. No songs
except to tell me “don’t cry out loud.”
No soup or warm milk or comfort.

I bore witness to the absence of that robe.

We sat silent and apart and mourned
my mother, each of us, robe and child,
hoping she would wake and walk
into the kitchen, glowing, mantled in pink,
a beacon of calm and safety and love.

Poem 10 – Christmas Lost

The stars are screaming
Lamenting the loss of baby Jesus
To a cacophony of horrid music
Infused with consumerism
And the awakened awareness
That we neglect our most vulnerable
For the rest of the year;
(Except for maybe Thanksgiving)

Thanks, capitalism.

Hour 14: Childlike Wonder

Cheerfully the children twirl
Happily capering for days
In chirpy, lilting voices
Little ones sing out their praise.
Dear little ones laugh and flee
Rejoicing in each bit of laughter
Engaged in the world around them
Never mind what might come after.

Winter Solstice

Day of the longest night
when earth, reborn,
begins to feed again.

Melting snow and
warming soil
births the seed again.

Oh, day of the longest night,
four and eleven days hence
we celebrate birth and death.

And birth again.

Girlie – Hour 14

I imagined you as a baby girl

Sleeping soundly in your bed.

I imagined you as a little girl

Playing happily at the park.

I imagined you as a high school girl

Driving your first car.

I imagined you as a young woman

Living life on your own.

I see you now as a grown woman

Slaying dragons and fighting windmills.

 

UH!

  • Dare to go.

The car won’t start.

Nor would it turn a gear.

Doors not opening ah! Uh!

So that.

You can step on out,

And while it’s running.

 

XIV. After Me

I have two daughters.

Yes, I do.

And with this prompt,

You could too.

 

But yours would never be perfect like mine,

Who always listen,

every time,

And perfectly do as I wish them do.

No, yours would have a flaw or two.

 

And yours, unlike mine,

might disagree,

were you to ask them do chores for me—

while mine do their chores without being asked,

–even the most egregious task.

 

Their rooms are spotless,

Their beds are made—

You’d never guess that’s where they laid,

when they went to bed at an early bedtime;

No playing games ‘til half-past nine.

 

Yours, I suppose, are on their cell too much,

Through breakfast, bath-time, school and lunch,

Glued to their messages, games and such.

I’m just sayin’; it’s just a hunch.

 

Are they kind and thoughtful, polite and a joy;

Speak when spoken to, hard to annoy;

Anticipate what their mother might need,

Generous givers, not given to greed,

Prayers, thinkers, and doers, too?

Love to learn most anything new?

 

I stand, again, before the mirror and preach,

To myself about what is out of their reach;

And remind myself that no matter the flaw,

They are my children, after all.

 

And years from now, when they’ve grown

And have a family of their own,

My grandchildren will behave perfectly,

Because, of course, they take after me.

Death

Death
Death wears her feelings
Embroidered with emotions
Like deep sea water

Hour 13

@varenyas

Magickal Recipe Book Insults You While You Cook a Magick Recipe

 

***This piece was cobbled together from a series of random words and phrases that were pulled from a mystery bag.***

The words/phrases were:

  • Autumn All Stars
  • Magic Organizing Tricks Mess be Gone Poo
  • Because Science Matters! Exit
  • Kick Some
  • Signature Baking calls for a Signature Ingredient

 

OCCULT-Os

pairs well with goat milk

Cauldron: 665.9 on 10 Minutes                                                                                              Yield: 1 Bowl of Occult-Os

Signature baking calls for a signature ingredient:

1 CUP SPIRIT ASH

 Collect spirit ash. To do this, use your ritual knife to conjure a low level ghost. Shear off bits of rattling chain or flowing garments (if it is a modern male ghost, we recommend taking off some of the unnecessary facial hair). Be sure NOT to get any ectoplasmic goo on you (it stains worse than bleach and burns the wicked, we know what you do when you think no one is looking)

Kick some of your spirit ash into a bowl (yes kick) and mix with a tablespoon of garlic. Make sure you wash your hands well before re-entering your magickal working kitchen. This is not for ritual purity, rather this is because germs are very real and we use science with our magick because science matters (unless you’re an anti-vax dullard).

Next you will need:

1 PINT SQUATCH TEARS

Squatch tears, or ‘Squears’ as they’re sometimes called, can be acquired after a good ribbing of a bigfoot. Also, be careful not to roast the bigfeets too hard, as they do get their feelings hurt and that’s not very nice (also, they WILL tear off your limbs like the dainty, dainty flower petals they are) it is advised, even after a good natured ribbing, to sprint back to your house/cave shouting back (don’t worry about being all complex here, Merlin) hexes to keep them at bay.

Leave Squears on a simmer (low-medium here, Ramsay).Add in two pinches of tumeric and even more garlic for flavor (but not too much there, Barefoot Contessa, or you’ll make the dish taste like Olive Garden leftovers pulled from a sink disposal unit).

Third, you’re gonna want to add:

5 AUTUMN ALL STARS HAIRS

Far be they from mystical beings, Autumn All Stars are your local 4H knockoff group. To avoid kidnapping, we recommend a LIGHT amount of chloroform (we mean it Dahmer) and a QUICK tweezing with magickal tweezers. DO NOT try their special Autumn Star Pie. It is HIGHLY addictive and you WILL resort to escalating crimes to feed your addiction and you WILL go to jail (you will be like a great pie junky, but instead of losing teeth or picking your skin to bits, you will get so fat and we WILL post mean things about you on social media.)

And now, it’s time for the final ingredient (don’t wet yourself):

 

1 DEMON POO

To collect, attend several exorcisms during October (what, do you think you’re the magickal Marco Pierre White, starting this in the Summer?) and wait for one of the exorcised to pop one out in defiance of God and the Church (puking is so 1980s). Collect said poo in our patented ‘Demon Mess be Gone’ Tupperware brand containers (if you put it in saran wrap, you deserve whatever happens to you) and take it back to your magickal ritual space. Combine poo, Simmered Squears and hairs with ash while reciting the magickal ritual (you shouldn’t even have to look at the book once. Do your homework next time, occult Ferris Bueller.) Add garlic. Salt for taste. Blood from finger. Pour mixture into tall, skull glass and spoon down while laughing maniacally. (don’t go all skeletor though, nerd.)

Use one of our patented magic organizing tricks to clean up. (If you leave the kitchen a mess, we will crawl from these pages and curse you and your lineage down to your cat.)