Friday, 10 April 2015
Thursday, 9 April 2015
Diary entry, 1993
“This is where
Mommy and Auntie grew up,” Joan tells the kid.
He is obviously unimpressed, but he’s only 4 years old.
“Was this
neighbourhood always so ugly?” I ask Joan.
“Wasn’t that hill bigger?”
Ryan laughs. “It’s funny how much bigger and better
everything seems in our memories.”
“They cut down all
of the trees,” I inform him. “And the
siding is hideous.”
He nods. After a while, Joan says, “We have to get
back before 2:00 so that I can make the turkey in time.”
The trip back to
the childhood home is over, but it has lasted long enough. I would rather remember how cool the cement
felt on my feet on early summer mornings than any of this.
Gone Off and Lonesome
I have been pining for you, old friend
I have been searching my organs for
clues of your existence
I have been listening to the buzz of
the lamps, my friend
I have been understanding that we
are all without evidence
Because you are the intervening cause
you are where I buried my investments
I have been searching the heat registers for you
only to find cotton balls that missed the garbage
can
I have stood on my toes and screamed
through my stomach
I have flown off the linoleum by the force
of my breath
I plead to the cobwebs for you to listen
I wake up with charlie horses at 3 am
When I lost my travel book centuries ago
burned the ancient forest where
you were my favorite tree
You are the reality I cannot close in on
what flew through my hair that I
mistook for permanency
I would like a chance to hold you, old friend
I would like to touch your materialness
But I beat against the kitchen table instead
keeping time with rhythmic
loneliness
Tuesday, 7 April 2015
1994
The pen bothered
me. So I asked him about it. “Where’d
you get this pen again?” It was fat and
full of multi-colored ink cartridges.
The strange animal
character on the screen jumped over a crumpled brick wall with an appropriate bo-ing sound. “I found it,” he answered.
“Oh. Okay.”
I walked into the hallway. But I
wanted to know more, so I asked, “Where?”
“School, I think,” he shouted from the other
room.
“Okay.” But I still didn’t remember. I knew I remembered at one time—and that was
the worst part.
Monday, 6 April 2015
Diary entry, 2012
WHERE IS THE
FORGIVENESS
God took it away
Whatever you think
you’re going
to hear
is exactly what I
am not
going to say
Letter to Carrie, October 1, 1989
Oh, I guess I have
some good news, but I want to complain first, okay? Okay.
My dad calls me at
9:00 a.m. and says, “Hi, are you mad at me?”
Then he bitches at me for about fifteen minutes since I, the horrible
daughter straight from Hell, haven’t written him in a week. I told him I was busy studying, etc., but he
was still pissed off. Then he says, “Has
your mother said something to you to make you hate me?” or something equally
retarded, to which I reply, “No!”
Finally I convince him that I am not angry with him, Mom hasn’t
persuaded me to hate him, etc. Then he
asks me how I’m doing. Oh, just
SWELL! You just made my day! Then he says how he’s buying all sorts of
food for me, but I have to see him to get it.
(No, I thought that I’d eat it through a psychic channel.) Guess that means I shouldn’t be expecting a
box in the mail. Ah, the joys of having
divorced parents. It never ends. Luckily, I had a class to go to. Thank god for small miracles.
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