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betty-bleen
betty-bleen
American Poet, actor, wife, mother, grandmother of 5, cat lover, dreamer, incurable flower child.
No mound of dirt was shuffled to top a grave. There will be no tombstone, no epitaph. No weeds to pull, lawn to mow, flowers to tend. There will be none of these. Only this box, this terra-cota colored plastic box, comprised of a sampling of him, secured by a seat belt on my car's back seat. It's fallen to me to transport his ashes from a city in Ohio to one in West Virginia, my poor dad, who's had the misfortune of dying in a hospital two hundred miles from home. How ironic, I think, that of all his years of living, he never once rode in my car, yet here we are on a road trip together. This is not my father. But it may as well be, the distance looms between us just as big a gap as it ever was, minus the polite conversation, the awkward moments we'd always encountered when together not knowing what to say to one another. As I drive I feel this need to talk to him, to tell him what I have always wanted to tell him. I love you Dad. But the words won't make that transition from head to mouth, prove themselves no easier to say after his death than they did in life. So I recite my poetry to him, poetry being the only thing I have to offer, words I'd never shared with him when he was alive. Poems flow from my mouth as freely as the tears which stream down my face. I cry for my dad but also for myself, for all the hugs never exchanged, all the words left unsaid. The car is eerily silent and I half-expect were I to glance in the rearview mirrow I'd see his ghost sitting on the back seat. I search the sky as I drive, praying for a sign, something to let me know he is at peace, But there is nothing, only blue sky dotted with clouds, and this plastic box entrusted to me for safe delivery. It asks nothing of anyone, gives nothing in return. Shortly it will be delivered to its final destination. Without hoopla or fanfare it will be placed on a table set up for the ceremony. Put there for the sole purpose of giving him a proper mourning.
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Nov 13, 2011
Nov 13, 2011 at 2:39 PM UTC
A DIFFERENT MOURNING
No mound of dirt was shuffled to top a grave. There will be no tombstone, no epitaph. No weeds to pull, lawn to mow, flowers to tend. There will be none of these. Only this box, this terra-cota colored plastic box, comprised of a sampling of him, secured by a seat belt on my car's back seat. It's fallen to me to transport his ashes from a city in Ohio to one in West Virginia, my poor dad, who's had the misfortune of dying in a hospital two hundred miles from home. How ironic, I think, that of all his years of living, he never once rode in my car, yet here we are on a road trip together. This is not my father. But it may as well be, the distance looms between us just as big a gap as it ever was, minus the polite conversation, the awkward moments we'd always encountered when together not knowing what to say to one another. As I drive I feel this need to talk to him, to tell him what I have always wanted to tell him. I love you Dad. But the words won't make that transition from head to mouth, prove themselves no easier to say after his death than they did in life. So I recite my poetry to him, poetry being the only thing I have to offer, words I'd never shared with him when he was alive. Poems flow from my mouth as freely as the tears which stream down my face. I cry for my dad but also for myself, for all the hugs never exchanged, all the words left unsaid. The car is eerily silent and I half-expect were I to glance in the rearview mirrow I'd see his ghost sitting on the back seat. I search the sky as I drive, praying for a sign, something to let me know he is at peace, But there is nothing, only blue sky dotted with clouds, and this plastic box entrusted to me for safe delivery. It asks nothing of anyone, gives nothing in return. Shortly it will be delivered to its final destination. Without hoopla or fanfare it will be placed on a table set up for the ceremony. Put there for the sole purpose of giving him a proper mourning.
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In the pet store My granddaughter squealing Reaching out her tiny hand Fingers delicately touching Soft white and gray fur Blue eyes staring Crystalline clear Weighing her every move She, ooh’ing and aah’ing Unaware… Memory flashing Hot as a gun blast Lines of pain creeping Over my face Burlap bags of Flickering motion Gurgling sounds Beneath wet stones My sisters and I Wading in the creek Searching for minnows Stumbling onto Their watery graves… My grandfather’s solution To the newest litter of kittens
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Nov 13, 2011
Nov 13, 2011 at 2:22 PM UTC
DISMAL SOLUTION
Early September and the leaves are falling, they crunch beneath my feet as I walk the dogs through the park. Scattered on the lawn they've become brown and brittle, fragile as my heart. Soon they will be trampled and forgotten, as if their existence in nature never mattered, as if life never coursed through their veins, with no thought as to how they played in the scheme of things. How easily we forget little things that once mattered, hearts, leaves, it's all the same thing.
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Nov 12, 2011
Nov 12, 2011 at 8:02 PM UTC
WHAT MATTERS
I hear you pull into the drive and the free spirit I've exercised all day abruptly folds into itself. I greet you at the door with a pasted smile, asking how your day was, expecting no reply yet, feeling the sting when I get none. Supper is served and you take yours into the living room, plopping yourself on the couch, balancing the plate and the remote with the finesse of a curbside juggler. I remain at the table, staring at you, staring at the TV, while a childhood rhyme plays in my head, *Nobody loves me, everybody hates me. Guess I'll go eat worms!*
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Nov 12, 2011
Nov 12, 2011 at 7:59 PM UTC
SURFACE OF A RHYME
What a surprise to see you as I was getting off work. You stopped by, you said, for a cup of coffee. I smiled as the words escaped your lips, both of us laughing at this, both knowing it for the ruse it was. As you followed me home so I could change, did you happen to see my smile in the side mirror? I was hard pressed to keep it on my face. It lit up my car like a tiny sun, bounced 'round and 'round from ceiling to floor, tried to unlock the doors and the windows. Said, it wanted to ride in your car.
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Nov 12, 2011
Nov 12, 2011 at 7:54 PM UTC
WHAT A SURPRISE
Perhaps this is the way Picasso got started, as a baby sitting in a high chair, dumping the dish and the cup, the fork or spoon to the floor, delighting in how the green of the pea met with the yellow gravy, how the mashed potatoes looked set against the wood plank of the kitchen floor. Did he laugh with glee to see the orange yolk of the egg swirled in the white of the milk, how the red Jell-O looked floating in the yellowed chicken soup? Later, when painting became more than a figment in his mind’s eye, did he recall this early experimentation, this playing with food? I prefer to think of you in this way daughter, dabbling in colors like a young Picasso, your only tools the fingers in your food. It is much easier on my psyche to channel happy thoughts your way, preferable to my getting upset, aggravated every time you dump your food, my blood pressure rising to the roof. At every meal you fend off any attempts to feed you, preferring to lift your own fork or spoon then send them sailing, as if to say, I will be in charge of my world. I will command what is at hand. As my mind wanders, I begin dabbling in daydreams, futuristic thoughts… I am beaming with pride… you are being called a genius as you are applauded for your latest masterpiece… but swiftly I am brought back to reality, as just as quickly you hurl from your high chair this meal’s rendition, today’s most recent work of art.
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Nov 12, 2011
Nov 12, 2011 at 7:44 PM UTC
ARTISTIC LICENSE
From the moment I read in my first grade reader, See **** run, I couldn’t wait to turn the page to view the pictures and see what other sorts of things **** could do. But my bigger passion was art, so it was an easy task for me to draw and color big letters to make an alphabet book, which we were told we could take home to keep. With the first letter, A, Sister Clara wrote on the chalkboard, A is for apple. In an effort to encourage us to pick appropriate colors she asked the class, What colors are apples? The class responded with red, yellow, green. Painstakingly coloring our A’s I was proud of myself for keeping within the lines, and based on Sister Clara’s beaming smile, just knew my A was the best A in the whole class. Today, going through old boxes I take out that alphabet book and smile as I open it to the first page, the letter A jumping out at me in boldly colored sections of plaids, polka dots, and stripes. My face beams its own smile of approval at the pleasant discovery that even at the tender age of five, I was already a rebel before my time.
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Nov 12, 2011
Nov 12, 2011 at 7:42 PM UTC
ALPHABET BOOK
You anticipate the bees’ arrival with that same wonder lust in your eyes that a child wears on Christmas Eve, spending the whole month before their arrival planning, thinking out the construction of their houses, going back and forth on the decision of where you will put them in the backyard. I listen with fascination as you explain to me about the workers, drones, and the queen, who from a larva you tell me, feeds solely on royal jelly. You have become a beekeeper extraordinaire, intent on teaching me everything you know about bees. And it is quite funny when you mimic the bee dance, buzzing around in circles, then abruptly changing direction and buzzing around again. I watch you with the same wonder lust in my eyes as you have when you talk about your bees, feeling a wealth of love for you, this man tenderly caring for and loving one of God’s smallest creations. I anticipate the bees’ arrival with dread, careful not to let on how much they intimidate me. After they arrive you take out a few and gently hold them up for me to see, the thought of their sting sending chills over my body. That night, as we do our own tango between the sheets, I think of them out there buzzing, buzzing; the ****** queen leaving the hive to mate with drones- the lazy bees who make no honey, their sole purpose to mate then die.
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Nov 12, 2011
Nov 12, 2011 at 7:42 PM UTC
THE HOUSES OF BEES
The roses on my table appear to be singing, so sure of themselves and their beauty. Both proud and arrogant they break into song the minute they are alone, when they think no one hears. I can tell by their pursed mouths, I have caught them in action, they have been silenced in midair by my scrutinizing eyes. With red mouths agape, they stealthily **** in air, in lieu of the next chorus, their petals wrapped tight to hide trilling tongues. They cannot fool me. From a vase on my table the roses are singing, stars in a theatre of dishes, pots and pans. I haven’t caught them yet for they are secretive and sly. Yet somehow I know this theory to be true. While I am away or while I am sleeping I know they are singing, shedding their petals like a burlesque singer sheds her clothes. They repeat their song, day after day, night after night, and they will go down singing, dropping from exhaustion as the water runs dry, till the last one withers and dies.
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Nov 12, 2011
Nov 12, 2011 at 7:39 PM UTC
JUST BEYOND THE SOFTEST SOUND
Before the actual birth, I tried to convince myself there could be no room for fear. That in fact, the only way I was going to get through this and come out smelling like a rose was to keep my wits about me, focus on my breathing and counting, and to push when I felt the need to push. When the labor pains worsened I forgot all prior convincing, edged out of that window to stand on the ledge of fear. Trying to push this baby through the birth canal was like trying to push a blimp through the Washburn Tunnel. All the preparatory lessons flew off that ledge like birds to the wind. As the sun rose over Houston, the rays of dawn crept through the hospital blinds, bringing with them the first cry of my newborn nine pound, fourteen ounce son, affirming that old adage that everything is bigger in Texas. And, as my eyes lit on the dozen yellow roses you had sent me, the thought that if I was going to come out of this smelling like a rose, the yellow rose of Texas was the one I’d want to be.
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Nov 12, 2011
Nov 12, 2011 at 7:22 PM UTC
PUSHING FOR TEXAS