Saturday at IKEA,
Can never be fun,
The crowds and the stress,
That I usually shun,
Furniture to assemble,
All packaged and spun,
But who’ll put me together,
After I’m done?
Monthly Archives: March 2012
Natural Beauty
With arms held high, she cheers
the lastest Eurovision Song Contest number.
With arms held high,
her natural armpits displayed
in all their shockingly unshaven glory.
The video becomes viral on YouTube.
She is called disgusting, repulsive,
unhygenic, and worst of all, unsexy.
She probably doesn’t shave her
pubic area either.
Or her legs.
Unsexy.
How dare she?
Doesn’t she know that
women are supposed to remove
all of their hair, apart
from what’s on the top of their heads?
And their eyebrows. But those should be
meticulously shaped, plucked or waxed.
At least today.
“So what’s with the eyebrows?”
I was repeatedly asked by students
when I took them to see a Frida Kahlo exhibit.
In those days in Mexico, thick bushy eyebrows were
considered sexually attractive.
“Really?? Gross!!!”
But armpit hair? That’s inexcusible.
That’s outrageous.
And as I get ready for another
painful sesson of waxing and plucking
of extraneous facial hair,
I wonder how it got that way.
Spring
Spring has sprung,
The grass is green,
Pass the antihistamine.
The Plea
Mid 50’s. Anxiety ridden.
Voices that taunt and degrade him,
Sometimes urging him to take his own life.
He’s tried on more than one occasion.
He’s hunched over, shuffles.
His right hand shakes uncontrollably,
most likely due to the barrage of psych medicines
that his body endures.
Here we are again, meeting yet another new doctor.
I’m here with him because it’s my job.
He’s here because he wants help, which entails him
telling his story again for the umpteenth time.
The doctor is pretty good as they go, and I’ve met my share.
He wants details about the voices, the thoughts,
the impulses, the hallucinations.
He tries to probe into childhood traumas,
but my client won’t go there. Can’t go there.
The doctor leaves it be. He knows not to push.
He does however need to talk more about suicide.
The attempts. The idealization.
It’s then, under this line of questioning, that this timid, shaky man,
whom I’ve known for nigh on ten years,
reaches down to his core, past all his problems,
and from that place somewhere deep inside,
with a voice that literally quivers with this unexpected surge
of all the power he can muster, spontaneously blurts out:
“I want to live!”
His words hang there for a moment,
and we take them in,
before continuing.
Feeling Spring
Spring is here at last!
Time to expose my toes.
Off with those winter clothes!
For spring is finally here.
I want to feel it on my skin,
Let the warmth and sunshine in,
I feel spring within my bones,
And especially up my nose.
The Cheeseburger Perspective
“It’s music that makes people come together. It’s like this, if we see the world in cheeseburger perspective, if the world didn’t have any music it would be like a cheeseburger without the cheese. That’s what I think.”
These were the concluding sentences in a student’s essay about the power of music. To me it sounds like the end of a Mark Base blog post.
Spelled Spelled Spelt
Spelled spelled spelt,
May be spelled right.
But to me it looks unkempt.
Don’t mean to start,
A grammar fight,
But it’s got me all verklempt.
Does one say dreamed,
Or is it dreamt?
Depends on where you’re from.
The English prefer,
Their past tense teas.
But Americans like them none.
We’ve spilled.
They’ve spilt
We’ve barbecued.
They’ve grilled.
We’ve stood in line.
They’ve queued.
And spelt to me.
Is not a verb.
It is a type of wheat,
With high protein,
And often served,
As a tasty breakfast treat.
Happy St. Paddy’s (not Patty’s) Day
I’m not even Irish,
Yet this bothers me…
But it’s Paddy, okay?
And not Patty.
Saying Patrick or Paddy
Is fine, even grand.
But Patty’s just wrong.
Please understand,
It’s wee for Patricia.
But in case you forgot,
A wee grand version
Of Patrick,
It’s not.
Slipping
Wind whipped,
Raw,
I saw you there,
Head tipped forward in despair,
Shoulders slumped,
The will to care slipping away,
And it hurt my heart,
But there was nothing to say,
So I held you.
Tedium
It certainly cannot be only me. Granted, I do enjoy living in my bubble doing my thing, but I cannot be the only human being on this planet who finds certain people entirely tedious.
Maybe it’s middle age. I have become very guarded about my time and how I invest it. In the past, I had patience to deal with people. Now, not so much. Things should be simple, pleasant and even. When things are not simple, pleasant and even, I find myself less willing to invest the time. There is freedom to packing proverbial bags and moving on.
Anyone else feel this way? I’m neither angry nor frustrated. I’m just over it.