February 29/March 2 2004— the Stirring

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    February 29/March 2 2004— the Stirring


    Prunes- That is what my life is like-

    (somewhere in her subconscious: a stirring)

    dark and messy and wrinkly- gooey, nauseating sweetness.

    (she remembers vague images she forced out of her mind, but carried with her anyway)

    And lots of teeny, tiny seeds- I don’t much care for them.

    (a tarantula is caught in a pickle jar on the highway-)

    They remind me of things once juicy and full and alive-

    (because it is Oklahoma and the combines are harvesting the spider’s home so it scurries away from its life into a glass prison)
    that are rotten now.

    (she recalls the soap opera she sneaks behind the couch to watch-because it’s
    forbidden to her- and the call comes from home that her dog is dead- and
    the mound of fresh-dug dirt in the backyard, by her dad’s grey boat- she
    never said goodbye)

    Or maybe an ice-cube- maybe that’s what would be a more accurate depiction-

    (her mother yells at her, and her dad stabs his harsh disappointment into her
    through the plastic telephone)

    Frozen in its neat, little compartment in a colorful tray, waiting

    (her legs prickle in the cold blast from the air conditioning in the small Sunday School room-)

    till it’s forced out of its perfect cold niche so it can melt- and be nothing.

    (she remembers swinging- she loved to swing- praying breathless to fly or fall-
    always scared to jump- she loves the wind in her face)

    I like ice, though- on a hot day in July-

    (arms wrap tightly around and she knows love, and the stars never appear as night
    falls silently)

    by the pool, in the heat-

    (the pool- she was always so self-conscious- she shuffles her feet before plunging
    off the creaky diving board into the deep end that wasn’t deep enough- last
    happy thought)
    I don’t much like summer, either-

    (empty, idle days she sits alone with the containing walls of her room and the
    solitary window she lets the light from the other world come in through)

    Itchy insect incisions- sweaty sticky sunburn- Maybe it’s like a fire:

    (the Pacific wind blows a cinder, falls on her jacket, melts the polyurethane, sears
    her thigh- she doesn’t want to be an inconvenience, so she picks it off and
    sits quietly gnawing a hole in her cheek)

    a darkly burning mass of flames; vibrant tongues that lick the sky and digest themselves-

    (the loneliness when she passes those woods, her woods, overgrown with weeds
    and civilization’s garbage- thoughts of another night- a surreal scene she
    holds on to, hazy through red-rimmed eyes- the perfect place always unreachable)

    until they become lifeless ashes.

    (rough hands grasp her by the waist, push her down, pull her apart- she screams
    into silence, chokes on her will- slips into confusion)

    Ashes. Yes-that’s what-who- I am. Not a prune or ice or fire- beyond life, beyond feeling.

    (she beats at the carpet with clenched fists- frustration- suicide’s not the answer,
    she knows- the thudding of her heart as she desperately pleads with it to
    cease of its own accord)

    But I do still- Oh god how I feel-

    (she hears the faint fairytale chimes of a distant music box, with its single, lonely
    ballerina, forever dancing to the tune of her own sadness)

    the crushing, squashing sensation of repressed tears-

    (she pulls the door to the stall shut-stands-tries to compose herself- not crying, not
    crying, but the lump of despair somewhere in her middle keeps pushing
    itself into her throat and she gags)

    and memories- that sometimes break the dam and drown. But then the waters recede-

    (she’s up at night, writing, vocalizing her very soul through the ink blots on the
    paper- realizes the glassy-eyed reflection in her dresser mirror is still the
    same as it was before, so she lays her weary head down and tries to sleep-
    perchance to dream)

    and I’m still me-

    (somewhere in her subconscious- a stirring…

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    looking4life commented on February 29/March 2 2004— the Stirring

    10-31-2009

    this poem is so intence, i was pulled right into the screen as read on. such passion and voice. "LET IT ALWAYS BE YOU" steve

    If I feel physically as if the top of my head were taken off, I know that is poetry.

    Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) American poet.

    morgainecnyll’s Poems (45)

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