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    a Jar of Buttons

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      alive smells

      hide hide

      safe

      sleep

      hunger awakens

      alive smells

      listen listen

      sniff; tip toe; listen

      sniff; stare; crouch

      POUNCE

      crunching bone

      warm pulsing blood flows

      the wild awakens

      Stay

      ride? RIDE!

      happy happy

      window! WIND!

      happy happy

      stop? play?

      fetch? FETCH!

      happy happy

      RUN RUN fetch

      happy happy

      return

      person?

      ride?

      stay stay

      search

      person?

      sniff sniff RUN

      sniff sniff RUN

      person? PERSON?

      stay stay

      thirsty

      stay stay

      hungry

      stay

      person?

      stay

      scared

      stay

      weak

      stay

      person?

      stay

      person?

      stay

      why? why?

      Under Control

      they can’t find me

      they never can find me

      stupid humans

      stupid mortals

      I hide in plain sight

      they don’t understand I am in control

      they are helpless without me

      with their feeble legs

      feeble hands

      feeble fingers

      lazy humans

      can’t walk across a room

      can’t see what’s in front of them

      look down mortal

      mistake me for a telephone

      a mere telephone

      I am superior

      stupid lazy humans

      can’t function without me

      they sit morose and

      stare into space helpless

      too stupid to lift a pillow

      or reach between cushions

      where I hide

      they never can find me

      they can’t find me

      but now I wish they would

      I need new batteries

      Men

      I know that I can’t understand

      the complexities of a man;

      a creature which doth confess

      his absolute high worthiness,

      and continually says to greet:

      “What is there in this house to eat?”

      insists his torn stained shirt to wear

      and none too often cuts his hair.

      He spends his time at work outside

      when near the loo he should abide.

      Wishes are made by wives like me,

      but only dogs should pee on trees.

      One Day in Town

      I have a wallet full of dollar bills.

      Snow is falling on my windshield.

      scatterplots

      dippin’-dots

      Cars lining up at a red light.

      A flock of birds exploding into midflight.

      winging

      singing

      Boxes piled up behind the junk store,

      people hanging out ‘round the back door.

      walking

      talking

      Ambulance screaming down main street,

      cars in the way make a quick retreat.

      driving

      surviving

      Lights start shining in the growing dusk.

      Litter lifted up and rising in a wind gust.

      swirling

      twirling

      Crowds gathered in around a local bar,

      decks of cards and coins in a glass jar.

      rambling

      gambling

      Aroma from a restaurant wafting in the air,

      couples strolling arm-in-arm without a care.

      satisfaction

      chain-reaction

      Leaving town heading towards familiar woods,

      returning to the place that makes me feel good

      Sacrifice

      i buried my crime deep

      in the garbage can, the jagged edges

      of the fatally wounded world

      an emblem of my shame.

      a world within itself

      where the slightest touch

      created angelic musical chimes

      and the pastel ponies and swans

      endlessly rocked to and fro

      in a blue-bubble playground.

      i plotted against that magical world.

      i couldn’t get in—

      so i wanted it out

      homicidal hurtles

      from the porch roof

      produced no dent

      or scratch to mar the perfect clarity

      that contained within it the peaceful

      unchanging pastel playground.

      in desperation a sharp kitchen knife

      pierced the seemingly

      fragile bubble,

      destroying the perfect purity

      of its crystal ball roundness.

      i sacrificed the

      Fisher-Price Chime Ball

      to possess a coveted

      rocking swan so my tiny

      Kiddle doll would have

      something to play with.

      What-ever

      Rhyme a simple rhyme they said

      it’s easy, don’t you see?

      The words will flow then don’t you know

      they’ll come right out of your head.

      Just go to town and write them down

      let them see the light of day

      and soon enough you’ll have the stuff

      and then be on your way!

      I try to rhyme a simple rhyme,

      they’re always in my head,

      but what I hear just disappears

      and goes away instead.

      And then what comes into my mind

      sounds more like Dr. Seuss—

      I don’t sound like a poet,

      I sound like Mother Goose!

      The Turtle Song

      I am a little turtle,

      I live inside my shell.

      I like being a turtle

      I think it’s really swell.

      Because I am a turtle

      I swim and poop and play.

      I like being a turtle

      ‘cause that’s the turtle way!

      Wordplay

      Remembered.

      Written,

      rewritten,

      arranged—

      deranged?

      rearranged,

      undefined,

      redefined,

      defined.

      Undermined,

      undetermined,

      determined.

      An in-depth desire to create

      words on a page to manipulate,

      thoughts not mine to originate.

      Words for which

      a picture to paint

      cause hands to tremble

      and hearts to faint.

      A mind-slide of images in onslaught

      Struggle for hard-won pages caught

      hoping my efforts are not for naught

      —for there are no original thoughts.

      Imagination caught in a vice,

      words bought with a price.

      supposedly not hard to wraught

      They ought to be sought, so they can be brought

      out into the light within everyone’s sight.

      Still, I am fraught—it’s no wonder I’m distraught a lot.

      ###

      Thank you for taking the time to read "a Jar of Buttons."

      If you enjoyed it, please recommend it to your friends.

      Burning Garbage

      It was safe behind the chair in this corner of the parlor. There were few safe places here. Her room wasn’t safe. Her Grandmother’s flower garden was safe, but it was two doors down the street. Her Grandma’s house
    wasn’t safe either; just the hidden garden, a small patch of grass surrounded by tall, yellow-flowered plants.

      She knew to stay quiet and out of the way. She had long ago learned to pull her fear and emotions in, and pack those feelings away deep inside, unseen and untouched. She clutched her tattered Raggedy Ann doll to her chest and closed her eyes against his latest tirade.

      “. . . little Sally Ann, sittin’ in the sand, cry Sally cry, stick yer finger in yer eye . . .” She wondered what Georgie had done to anger him. She knew her brother was the main target this time. Their father only called Georgie “Sally Ann,” not the girls.

      “. . . you kids are killin’ yer mother!” She could feel the hate in his voice. It slammed into her soul like the ax on the chicken’s neck that one afternoon in the backyard. “She’s workin’ ‘cause you kids take everything!” She knew the real reason her mother had to work. It was because he missed so many days at the factory that the other workers took bets on whether or not he’d show up . . . “an’ when she’s dead I’m puttin’ the bunch a ya inta a home!” His voice grew louder and louder as he raged on. She knew the neighbors could hear. She could tell by the way they looked at her.

      She peeked out from her safe place. He was holding Georgie’s best softball menacingly over his head. Her sisters were cowering near the open door, Georgie bearing the brunt of the rampage. “. . . an’ if I hear a single sound outta you kids I’m gonna git my belt an’ tan yer hides!” He was going upstairs to sleep off the six-pack he had for lunch. She was glad. The house would be safe for a while.

      Peace of Woods

      A spirit of optimism can’t help but overtake me when I wander through the sacred peace of woods, over templed hills, rejoicing in the beauties of nature, of outside places that can yield adventure, tranquility, or inspiration, depending upon how I choose to see.

      As I contemplate the trodden courses, I wonder, with which eye will I view this day’s wanderings? The artist in me will glorify in the unending variety of colors of that which I view, comparing the varying hues and textures, marveling at the beauty and complexity present in what a tamed person would dismiss as “just a dandelion.”

      To my artist’s eye, the majestic boulders strewn about the edges of the stream are ancient castles, timeless ruins in mossy disguises. Nature’s clouds paint the sky in pastel, feather-like touches, or massive splotches of pillowed white or deep gray, depending on her mood. Intricate patterns of hemlock over-layed stone, criss-crossed tree trunks interspersed with wild, thorny brambles, all branded by glowing rays of sun—everything I see, a masterpiece.

      If perchance I experience this day’s wandering as the poet in me, my footsteps will mark the rhythmic meter of words written by long-dead bards. “I wandered lonely as a cloud that floats on high o’er vale and hill …” If not a poem, then a hymn will spring to mind, and the wind and I will serenade the forest with the rhythm of countless leafy branches conducting our concert, “All creatures of our God and King, lift up your voice and with us sing—Alleluia!”

      Perhaps this day’s walk will belong to the philosopher I am, and I take the road less traveled, walking in the dusty footsteps of others who may have passed this way before. Much of my wandering is spent wondering—had they noticed the rusty, jagged strand of barbed wire hanging from the ancient red oak, or the ghost of a stone foundation hidden amidst the trees?

      Could they detect the faint patterns of long-overgrown roads in the forest floor, or the faded rows of plowed furrows in the aster-and-goldenrod plaited fields? Could they read the land and see the farm that once was, from someone’s long-ago allotment of time?

     
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