Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
Song of the '70s - 1. Song of the '70s
.
Song of the ‘70s
i.
A too-insistent song stirred me awake
In morning’s yet sleeping half-light,
And this tome of a bygone age I’ll yield
To invoke some of its delight.
For daily such times drift farther away
And fade from living memory
To be consigned to the history books:
Truth and lies’ repository.
Yes, I’ll sing of the 1970s –
What a kid then in those hours
Felt and saw, and lived in experience –
So, come now my Muse; my Powers.
Let me raise my voice to turn back the clock,
And all of my memories bring
To bear on an era sadly long dead,
For now I start my chant and sing:
Of patent leather platforms
Shoeing the feet of the boys,
And beaded moccasin flats
Riding those of the girls.
Of mood rings cabochon
Steeling a pirate-booty
On the digits of teens –
From a happy purple
To a sallow yellow
And misery and disappointment,
A million glances tell
How a teen body feels.
Of googly-eyed rocks
Caged within the plastic ribs
Of dishwasher soap dispensers
Or with painted eyes or mouths
Or with monkey-fur toupees –
Pets, housed loose on
Dresser tops or in boxes tagged:
"Danger – Pet Rock!"
Or Wacky Packy stickers
Still smelling red and gummy
Straight from the wax paper packs –
Stuck everywhere – the gum
In great wads left under
Iridescent Formica tabletops.
Of Solid Gold '79 dancers
Reigned over by a divine
Dionne Warwick – of TV for kids,
Woody Woodpecker everyday at 3;
Tarzan on Sunday at 9 –
Wrestling at the Chase at 11,
And late night riskiness
We kids not supposed to watch
10:30's Benny Hill.
Of the inner dark and brooding
Space: 1999, to the carefree
Junkmen in space
Their celestial garbage truck
Taking them from world to world.
At night, the Specials our folks
Wanted to watch, they lined up
One after another –
Tony Orlando and Dawn
Singing Kung Fu Fighters;
Sonny and Cher, divorced,
But pledging "I Got You, Babe"
And The Carpenters with
"Rainy Days and Mondays" –
But on Saturday mornings, we kids ruled
With Scooby-Doo,
The Land of the Lost,
Bugs Bunny too
H.R. Pufnstuf tossed.
The younger had an everyday
Dose of Sesame Street
And Roger's slip on and off
Of tennis shoes. Yes, we
Would be his.
And of prime-time
Game shows, Joker's Wild
And the Newlywed Game.
Reruns too – Love, American Style;
Flipper and Emergency!
Roots changed the world in '77,
Taught much of what we needed to know.
And jokers Gay reigned
From panel and square:
Reilly from The Match Game;
Lynde from way out Hollywood –
And everywhere,
Wayland Flowers and Madam
She with chattery choppers,
He with a fey dip of the shoulder.
On our bodies were clad
The good, the bad, the uncomfortable –
What was wrong with cotton?
No, we wore tight scratchy
Bellbottoms of triple-knit polyester –
A chafe for a chafe –
On our feet, plastic sandals
Made in West Germany,
While the 'rich' kids got
Suede Hush Puppies, or
Glorious Thom McAn's.
New were flannel-lined and zipped
Windbreakers with poly shells –
Colors were choice – mainly a maroon,
Or other shades of red.
Zippers broke quickly –
The wind broke through.
The mall and the Happy Meal –
Star Wars figures, cut out collector's cards,
All with a tinge of
French fry grease
And the tangy bite of salty fingers –
How happy were we!
Yes, and on TV, commercials
For older folks to collect
Franklin Mint model cars,
Or plates, plates, plates –
Collect them all!
From Raggedy Andy to
The Rocky Mountains,
And of lead-paint
Glasses to get one by one –
A soda-filled glass
With Hamburglar or Grimace –
Or mom and pop burger joints
Selling a set with Popeye,
And Wimpy and Swee'Pea too.
And my song sings of inspiration –
How we boys all would grow
To be paramedics and firefighters,
Or doctors or nurses too,
Because of one show – Emergency!
And how in '76 Dorothy Hamil
Spun her tutu medley over the ice –
Bruce Jenner shyly smiled from the podium,
And both encouraged kids to dream
From the front of a Wheaties box.
1976, that magic year!
Everywhere Betsy Ross' flag, even
In Montreal to wave Jenner on,
The Schnuck's toy soldier logo
Donned red white and blue,
White stars on his double sashes –
Tall ships paraded before Lady Liberty,
All in best of honor as
Sailor upon sailor stood
on yard upon yard
To greet her like the free men they were.
That Thanksgiving, Charles Kuralt
Hosted the Macy's Parade,
And I first learned that
Benjamin Franklin wanted
The turkey to be our national bird,
While that summer, The Screamin' Eagle,
The world's fastest roller coaster
Ran us local kids up and over
And dropped and made us duck
At 65 miles per hour. She was the last
Of the great wooden coasters built.
And my song too is of the seasons –
Spring then, when the air was
Many times less polluted than ours –
A breath of which reminded,
With joy, what to have life meant.
To the field we'd go,
Our hands overladen with things to
Pay tribute to the freshness
Above and in our heads –
Kites; little pairs of sticks and paper,
The older kids laid them out –
A dab of glue, a smidge of time,
And skeins of line – kites, kites –
How to run into the wind,
How to hold the other's kite, to run,
To release – To Soar! with
The bit of stick and paper and glue.
And my song too is of
Model planes big enough to seat
Us boys' G.I. Joes. Such love
Was needed – Q-tips to clean
The many moving parts –
Grease dabbed to make those engines roar;
Model engineering all bent
To serve the awe and riot
Of boyhood laughter –
Of rising cheer and wonder,
To know a model plane
Flies all on its own,
Just as the mighty ones
Did during the war
To win us our chance
To fly a perfect Spring day.
And my song is
Of Summer –
The days growing hotter then
Slip 'n Slides in most back yards,
Cutoff jeans the best attire
To glide down its
Watery runway.
Days at the public pool –
Splash, not too close to
The deep end –
Proper trunks required,
One pieces for the girls,
Later, men naked beneath
The pool room's shower,
And afterwards to
The ice cream shack –
The swank go for
The Drumstick,
The girls for the chocolate dips,
And me – my heart
Was only cooled
By Fred and Wilma
On the cardboard tube
With plastic plunger and straw
That elevates Orange Sherbet
To my parched soul.
A smile in flavor.
And my song too
Is of Autumn –
Or as we kids only knew it – Fall.
Of plastic masks
So hard to breathe from,
So shallow to see out of –
And moms' over concern
With broken-zip windbreakers
Over, and spoiling, our box costumes –
Cowboys and paramedics,
Dracula and Cinderella,
All readily printed
On polyester slip-on frocks –
Imagination brought it to be
The crudely obvious thing
We wanted to become –
So the candy comes,
Our plastic jack o' lanterns groan –
Mary Janes, and snippets of
Kit Kats, $100,000 Bars, Baby Ruths,
Reggie! Bars, and Zero Bars
With their white chocolate coating,
And ever and anon
Black and orange wax-papered
Peanut butter chews.
All spilled out – the six of us
Rooting and categorizing –
All of us trading:
My candy bracelets
Swapped to the girls for
Packs of Pop Rocks,
Almond Joys for some
Lovely strips of SweeTarts.
The question, the goal became,
Would we, could we, make
The candy last until Thanksgiving?
The girls by then still had a few;
The boys, never.
And in school, the turkeys
Drawn by silhouette of hand,
The printed cutouts on the walls
Of Myles Standish and Squanto –
Of spilling cornucopia,
Or Rockwell families and smiling faces.
Of Fall's quickening air,
Of the tinge in the nostrils
Of the wafting burning leaves –
Cloudy skies looming cold overhead.
And my song is
Of Winter too.
Winter that came out
From deep recesses
With mothball scented mittens,
Cedar-impinged mufflers,
And coats new every season –
Because we grew and grew.
For the boys; the older boys,
Insideout sheepskin panels
Were stitched together
With outward facing seams,
And big woolly lapels and collars –
For the girls; the older girls,
Down-filled satin was
Quilted like comforters
All about the shoulders,
But pinched in at the waistband.
Polyester earmuffs
Sprung on a painful plastic
Band that put a constant pinch
Just above the ears.
But Christmas – the time to love, for –
Andy Williams
And Bing Crosby,
Their holiday TV specials
In '77 competed, and
Once or twice,
Caren Carpenter sang:
Lovelier than an angel,
About the joys of Christmas
From a TV with the slow sadness
Of one to soon die too young.
Of Kmart Blue Lights –
Loudspeaker announcements –
Flashing from the toy department,
A mom must be dragged there
To see; to suggest; to point out
"It's on sale!"
Oh Kmart, and Venture too –
Floors awash in fragrant wax
And airs pumped with
Popcorn and brain-freeze;
Kiddy brains on Icees blue,
Or on cherry reds.
Looking out the store window,
Who cared if it snowed?
20-inches one year,
A town of Snowmen,
Snowwomen and Snowkids too;
An ice fort with second level
One that stayed for weeks –
A snowy playground,
Enough to last a lifetime –
The fort assaulted in equal turns
By teams of small boy throwers.
Knitted mittens – and only mittens –
Soon soaked through and through
But our hot active fingers felt
Not a tinge of cold.
While in the houses
Surrounding our laughing heads,
Our flying snow-hearts,
The folks unpacked the things
To make the season bright.
Aluminum trees: rotating stands,
Projector lights with colored pie pieces,
Gave way to plastic trees –
First to those cast
In separate branch and needle –
Each one snapping into place,
And each one still rough with seams –
Extra plastic clinging to the edges,
And the whole ensemble smelling
Like forest-green petroleum.
These too were replaced
By bottlebrush shagginess –
Bristle brush branches gliding
Into a numbered sequence
On the pole of a tree trunk.
Colored lights. A riot of which
Blinked and strobed and pulsed and waved –
Red and yellow and green and blue –
Blink; Blink; Blink,
While these colored dots flashed,
Heirloom ornaments glinted.
Shiny Brites from just after the war
Shaped like UFO's,
Or spinning Deco tops;
Clear plastic prisms
With scenes of choir figures
Under glass –
And then the mania –
Every free hand working
To bead, to pin prick,
Styrofoam balls with
Plastic facets, with sequins, with pearls –
Belted round with ribbons pinned
At their north poles into hanging loops.
But also on the tree
Tucked here and there,
A flock-coated Santa,
One arm out,
One arm up,
Pirouetting freely,
Magically deep within
The cast fur needles,
Or deep among
The bottle brushes –
Freely, gaily, he danced –
My task was to find him.
Find this elusive spirit,
The figurehead of Christmas itself.
And of New Year’s Eve,
We were allowed to stay
Awake to midnight,
When folks on the TV,
And our folks in our living rooms,
Would wish a Happy Blessing on
One another for the year yet to be.
And on the screen, the people rising to
A standing position, and on our rug,
Our parents would kiss and hug, and
Then all would quiet and cease their
Noisome blowing on tin trumpets,
And with stilled hearts, they’d remember those
Long taken from the scene by death.
We’d sing in national unity the tradition
No one then would dare suggest
Was “out of date.” Auld Lang Syne
Meant something then – to us –
A chance to thank and venerate
All the war dead in Europe and Asia,
All the old acquaintances who
Were still gladly brought to mind,
Never to be forgotten or shirked.
We kids sang along as well, knowing
This special moment was just that:
Special in the way it connected everyone.
ii.
Well, there you have it; my song is complete,
And in your head you will now find
A place where all my memories can live:
You watched the spool of film unwind.
You saw the flashes; you felt the scratches;
You smelled the joy of the seasons
Coming unalloyed to brighten us kids
With neither questions nor reasons.
And with that, it’s back to sleep I may drift,
Free to dream of Marilyn McCoo;
The Carpenters; the Captain and Tennille;
Sonny and Cher; and the others too.
For now, reader, that these treasures have been
Allowed room in you on their own part
To settle in and bring nostalgic thoughts,
I’ll rest, knowing they’re safe in your heart.
~
_
- 7
- 3
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
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