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.
Retrospective - NaPoWriMo 2021 - 2. Week Two
Retrospective – Week Two
#8
Snow Globe
I press my nose against the frosty windowpane,
Watching the snow swirl around a scene I can’t be part of.
The cold grounds me,
Temporarily relieving the soul-deep uncertainty.
A car leaves gashes in the freshly-fallen powder,
Driving away from here,
Leaving me jealous of their freedom.
The neighbors across the street
Pull into their driveway,
Three generations illuminated by the glowing streetlamp,
Fuzzy with flakes,
Enduring or ignoring the fear together.
The black cat chirps as it weaves around my legs,
Asking for second dinner,
Unfazed by human concerns.
#9
Hypervigilance
The refrigerator harmonizes with traffic and trains.
A new noise joins the fray, the source of which must be found.
It’s the air conditioning units next door,
Not someone lurking outside.
The hum of the sump pump lasts thirty seconds and ends with a thunk.
TV sitcoms cover the sounds… mostly.
It’s time to sleep, but instead of heartbeats slowing,
They accelerate.
Breaths come when the body can’t hold them anymore.
Relaxation comes with valium.
#10
Water cascades down cement blocks,
An unwelcome indoor accessory,
It finds cracks in the concrete patches
Holding the foundation tenuously together.
Jettisoned outside,
its journey is cut short
as it finds the path of least resistance
and gleefully erodes soil and brick
in an endless cycle
until the motor wears out,
flooding the basement
#11
I thought it macabre when my grandma asked
What things we wanted after she died.
To her, the question was practical.
To me, it was unthinkable.
Mom wanted the china cabinet and
The glass with circus animals on it
She and my aunt always squabbled over like toddlers
When it came time to set the dishes out for dinner.
My aunt wanted the dining set with the table
That had extra leaves to expand for company.
I wanted nothing to do with it.
After time and thought, I remembered.
Remembered sitting on the floor
Guessing birds from descriptions my grandpa read to us
From books taken from the desk I sat in front of.
Great Grandpa’s desk he used a lifetime ago,
When he taught equally ravenous minds history.
The red-winged blackbird was my favorite.
“I want Great Grandpa’s desk.”
Stunned looks and silence was my family’s response.
Grandma took an index card out of the desk
And wrote my name on it,
Staking my claim.
It now sits in my downstairs bedroom,
Filled with porcelain horses instead of books.
The index card is still there.
#12
Bunny
Steadfast friend who absorbed tears, hugs, and anger,
Leaving not much fur left on the faded yellow and white fabric.
Scars of contrasting thread stitched up wear and tears with surgical precision
By Doctor Mom.
Floppy ears cover black yarn eyes and a used-to-be pink nose.
The rabbit’s head falls forward on its wobbly neck,
Worn thin from being carried for years in a choke-hold.
It wears an elegant pink dress once worn by the infant who
Outgrew it fifty years ago.
#13
Garden of Dreams
Past, present, and future sit together on a bench,
Next to yellow snapdragons and fragrant lilacs,
And talk about poems and prayers and promises,
What was
What is
What will be
In the next life we choose.
#14
Food is my temple
A sacred preparation
Love and fellowship
Prompts:
8. The suggestion is to write about the sense of being lost—at any age, stage, time of life. Either you are lost or you have lost something.
9. Unprompted
10. Write a poem with broken things in it. You might love them the way they are or feel the need to fix them.
11. Let “things” appear in your poem’s title, or make your poem somehow list or talk about ordinary things we possess, so, as readers, we see them differently and they become new to us.
12. More “things”.
13. Unprompted
14. Let your poem have at its heart a real or metaphoric temple.
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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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