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DianneM
DianneM
Dianne is a former LA inner-city teacher who now writes poetry and picture books. Her third book, 1, 2, 3 BY THE SEA, was on Bank Street's "best book list, 2014." She is a frequent contributor to Highlights magazines and writes haiku.
There’s no good men out there, Mamma says, then yammers on ‘bout my dear Daddy who left us for ***** and other women. Never even phoned once in those twenty-odd years before he dropped dead of cirrhosis in a ****** downtown hotel. There’s no good men out there. Big Daddy beat Gramma. Knocked a tooth out once, called her “Dumb Swede,” ‘fore he ran off with a girl of seventeen. Then Andy who lied, spent Gram’s job money. Third one was a crotchety, mean drunk. There’s no good men out there. Great Uncle Harvey- never the same after the war. Nothing but a dirt poor farmer. Strayed down to the gin mill most nights. No indoor plumbing, all those long winter nights racing out to the old outhouse, dodging piles of chicken **** There’s no good men out there. Sister used her long string of them as good example: potheads, speeders, one musician, and that Mamma’s boy vet who hears choppers overhead and needs five Jim Beam’s for “medicinal purposes” ‘fore he can sleep nights. There’s no good men out there. Doctor made me recall a few jokers of my own: G. who hated working, oh yeah, and Rob with his 6 DUIs. Surfer dude, Joe, high on fiberglass, that well-heeled tight wad. When Doc called my latest nothing but an animated ***** I laughed so hard I ‘bout cried. There’s no good men out there. Seems like every gal I know says there’s no good men out there, anywhere. Maggie’s John screws any babe who gives him a second glance. Sue says her Frankie might as well be mute. every man alive's a dumb **** But hey, all’s I need is one.
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Jun 21, 2019
Jun 21, 2019 at 1:05 PM UTC
Mamma Told Me
There’s no good men out there, Mamma says, then yammers on ‘bout my dear Daddy who left us for ***** and other women. Never even phoned once in those twenty-odd years before he dropped dead of cirrhosis in a ****** downtown hotel. There’s no good men out there. Big Daddy beat Gramma. Knocked a tooth out once, called her “Dumb Swede,” ‘fore he ran off with a girl of seventeen. Then Andy who lied, spent Gram’s job money. Third one was a crotchety, mean drunk. There’s no good men out there. Great Uncle Harvey- never the same after the war. Nothing but a dirt poor farmer. Strayed down to the gin mill most nights. No indoor plumbing, all those long winter nights racing out to the old outhouse, dodging piles of chicken **** There’s no good men out there. Sister used her long string of them as good example: potheads, speeders, one musician, and that Mamma’s boy vet who hears choppers overhead and needs five Jim Beam’s for “medicinal purposes” ‘fore he can sleep nights. There’s no good men out there. Doctor made me recall a few jokers of my own: G. who hated working, oh yeah, and Rob with his 6 DUIs. Surfer dude, Joe, high on fiberglass, that well-heeled tight wad. When Doc called my latest nothing but an animated ***** I laughed so hard I ‘bout cried. There’s no good men out there. Seems like every gal I know says there’s no good men out there, anywhere. Maggie’s John screws any babe who gives him a second glance. Sue says her Frankie might as well be mute. every man alive's a dumb **** But hey, all’s I need is one.
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IT’S COME TO THIS by Dianne Moritz Once she sipped daiquiris by the pool high above Hollywood gazing down at the vista. Eucalyptus shade cooled her soft, tanned skin as she kissed his lips under the California sun. There he made promises to love her forever and ever and ever until the twelfth of never. Today she lives in the east writing... remembering dreams of long ago when now was all everything she wanted to know.
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May 30, 2019
May 30, 2019 at 2:50 PM UTC
IT'S COME TO THIS
58,000 plus names carved in black granite we must remember
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May 25, 2019
May 25, 2019 at 1:38 PM UTC
a haiku
Cowboys and Indians by Dianne Moritz We ambushed enemies, killed and maimed, releasing aggression in childhood games.
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May 24, 2019
May 24, 2019 at 1:07 PM UTC
COWBOYS AND INDIANS
INSTRUCTIONS TO A CAMERA* By Dianne Moritz Find good light, perfect angles. Blur your focus, soften scars, furrows of frowns, deep crow’s feet. Catch a dazzling twinkle of mischief in sunlit eyes, bright smile on pouty lips. Pause a moment. Ready… set... click your shutter. Published in “Today’s Little Ditty” May 23, 2019
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May 24, 2019
May 24, 2019 at 1:05 PM UTC
INSTRUCTIONS TO A CAMERA
Driving down Flying Point Road today, I thought of you and me winding up Mount Tamalpais, dust coating our happy lips. I’d drape my thin arms over your hard shoulders and rush ahead moments: nestling in pine shade, deep joy echoing there.
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May 23, 2019
May 23, 2019 at 1:20 PM UTC
Riding Motorcycles
GAMES OF HOPSCOTCH In the days of innocence and Eisenhower, most girls would play their games of hopscotch. Jay-walking to a vacant lot across the street, we’d kick away debris and bits of broken glass, scratch out our game-boards on rough cement with pieces of chalk snitched from school. Like kangaroos, we’d hop, hop, hop, jump, hop turn around, till sweat dripped down our rosy cheeks, and our lips craved ice-cold cherry Cokes, grape popsicles from Sweeny’s drugstore down the block. We’d skip off laughing, hand in hand, stepping over wide cracks, sparing our mothers’ backs. Just yesterday, I read the news: DOPE DEALERS BUSTED on my old street corner. Bullets popped, brains and blood littered the black-top war zone. Now, trails of paint, white as lines of pure ******* mark the place dead bodies fell...down, down, down, all meandering toward the spot we girls once played our games of hopscotch...high on life.
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May 17, 2019
May 17, 2019 at 11:26 AM UTC
GAMES OF HOPSCOTCH
JUST ANOTHER NIGHT OF COUNTRY DANCING by Dianne Moritz They come dressed like real dudes: faded levis, tooled leather boots, silver concha belts, hair slicked back under cowboy hats, raring to Boot Scootin’ Boogie. They sashay over, heels clacking on the wax tongue-n-groove, offer out a callused hand, swing you through the rowdy crowd, singing “Achy, Breaky Heart,” confident they’ll soon break yours. They lock you in a fierce embrace, glance down, ask: So how’ve you been?, all the while checking out the competition, lazy and loose with ***** Shuffling left, instead of right, they stumble, stomp your toes, clumsy with the latest dance craze, then twirl you under their sweaty armpits, sultry air around heavy with greasy smells: French fries, onions, barbecue, burgers, beer. They yammer on about themselves, casually blowing lion-breath into your smiling face, as you plot your escape to coincide with the guitar’s last twang, secretly praying a tall, handsome stranger two-steps into view.
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Apr 30, 2019
Apr 30, 2019 at 11:52 AM UTC
JUST ANOTHER NIGHT OF COUNTRY DANCING
DEER CROSSING by Dianne Moritz Driving along Deerfield, north to North Haven, headlights catch glints of a deer's eyes. He stops. Leaps of freedom freeze there in the brush. On a return trip home, one brown carcass lies graveled on the shoulder, ****** head bent back, mouth open, calling warnings to the woods.
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Apr 29, 2019
Apr 29, 2019 at 11:09 AM UTC
DEER CROSSING
Mother’s Weeping Willow by Dianne Moritz Mother carefully snipped a small, green cutting from a friend’s lush yard, set it to root in an old jam jar on our kitchen window sill. Us kids were intrigued, as fragile shoots spouted, buds of leaves unfurled, like baby fists, opening to streaming sunlight. Sometime later, Mother carried an elfin sapling outside to our backyard, placed it in the warm, rich, fertile Iowa soil. We watched in wonder, watered & tended the tiny tree, doubtful it would survive the scorching summers, harsh winters. But we learned that Old Mother Nature is shrewd, and by summer’s end our tree grew four feet, as tall as me, and thrived. How we loved that willow! We’d hide beneath its boughs, to read, nap, and daydream, a safe haven, our spot to plot our next adventure. Mother’s Weeping Willow is gone now, chopped down for firewood; yet, it remains, in memory, a testament to life’s transient beauty…. HAPPY EARTH DAY!
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Apr 22, 2019
Apr 22, 2019 at 4:04 PM UTC
Mother's Weeping Willow