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brett-houser
American
There’s chaos in suburbia when the school bus runs only even five minutes early on the second day of school and parents and children alike wear mild panic in bright colors like first-day clothes with hidden tag-ends still scratching the neck. By year’s end a missed bus will be commonplace, wash- faded and comfortable, and resignation over just one more missed opportunity becomes sweatpants and house-slippers dragging back in to locate keys and on good days a quick swipe of a comb before buckling the future into a booster seat and driving across town to wait impatiently in the long line of idling cars.
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Aug 15, 2013
Aug 15, 2013 at 2:59 PM UTC
Morning
In a classroom neat as a pin the sixth grade social studies class discussed serfdom in western Europe. Young voices decried the inevitability of life for serfs. They espoused running away from the manor, could not conceive of a lack of options. One young girl asked if a serf girl could marry the lord, if the lord really loved her. She had been sold on an idea of equality. Marrying a serf, I told her, would be like a farmer marrying a cow from his herd. The concept was beyond her. Of that I was glad.
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May 3, 2013
May 3, 2013 at 5:08 PM UTC
Middle Ages
Again today I hunted the wily morel, armed with little knowledge and dulling eyes. I sought in vain through gooseberry thicket, pucker brush, cedar, tripping on fox-grape vines, finding only box tortoises and one sad reminder of an autumn pastime: the picked- over carcass of a young buck, bones and hide scattered at the foot of a stately white oak. I claimed the skull. On the drive home I collected six morels from a high bank roadside. I took them, leaving the skull and rack of the buck. Balance is important.
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Apr 30, 2013
Apr 30, 2013 at 4:28 PM UTC
Seeking
"Best of luck in future endeavors" is the cruelest phrase in the English language.
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Apr 29, 2013
Apr 29, 2013 at 5:10 PM UTC
Jobless
Brown oak leaves underfoot, last year's sodden reminders that newness always ends. But not today while the creek, silent in summer, chortles about last night's rain, full of spring vigor far below the limestone bluff edge where I stand, chert nodules and fractals peeking through springy new undergrowth, broke down limbs, leaf litter and dark soil. I came for morels but it's too early, too chill yet. Tomorrow's predicted sun may bring them out. Early mayapple sprouts fool me, draw me to admire other understory plants: trillium, maidenhair fern, spring beauty, johnny jump-up and more whose names I knew once but forgot. I came alone and I don't need names. Names mean nothing without voices and other ears. I love the silence I bring here.
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Apr 28, 2013
Apr 28, 2013 at 9:54 PM UTC
Spring Day, Overcast