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number-8
American
Aging Miss Forty      dating twenty-seven-year boys           is done with old men.     22.vi.11
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Jun 23, 2011
Jun 23, 2011 at 6:28 AM UTC
She Can't Do the Math
It should be easy      just letting each other go . . . so why is it not? 27.iv.11
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Apr 28, 2011
Apr 28, 2011 at 7:45 AM UTC
When It's Time
From grey Nebraska           approaching Colorado                     sun foretells new life.           19.iii.11
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Mar 31, 2011
Mar 31, 2011 at 5:42 PM UTC
Desiring a Fresh Snowy Start to Spring
Days become decades as rejection replaces hope; she just doesn't call.
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Mar 22, 2011
Mar 22, 2011 at 5:45 AM UTC
Anticipation
a father and son once lost for generations  trade rhythm and rhyme what we couldn't speak through that growing up clutter we have found in time      7.iii.11
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Mar 7, 2011
Mar 7, 2011 at 5:52 PM UTC
On Finding Ourselves to Be Adults
My father was famous for noticing endings admitting defeats accepting declines moving along being a good, end-of-game sport. Sometimes he’d spark a surprise come back— an evening of the score. “*The folks are as good as the people*” he’d declare. But as life invariably turns out, the folks are    rarely             as good                          as the people the pitcher as the batter the husband as the wife the striker as the goalie the salesman as the prospect the child as the parent the ying as the yang. In competitions someone always conquers, even if just a bit; the other always loses, even if just surface wounds— death always comes natural or quick. Then you know: “*It’s all over         but the crying.*” Dad, I’ve been crying, but when will I know “it’s over?” And, since some “folks” aren’t so good after all, please tell:         How victorious is victory?         Who is defeated in defeat?         What is the final score?         Who won again? The true score for when it’s over is perhaps how we make sense of the endings,                                                     beginnings,                                                                           and                                  rebeginnings                 of life shared and                                                                                           solitary. So where is that game clock that tally board, that ledger to release my game announce my endings settle my scores so I can do my crying and prepare for next season?         18.i.11
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Mar 5, 2011
Mar 5, 2011 at 3:14 PM UTC
But the Crying
My father was famous for noticing endings admitting defeats accepting declines moving along being a good, end-of-game sport. Sometimes he’d spark a surprise come back— an evening of the score. “*The folks are as good as the people*” he’d declare. But as life invariably turns out, the folks are    rarely             as good                          as the people the pitcher as the batter the husband as the wife the striker as the goalie the salesman as the prospect the child as the parent the ying as the yang. In competitions someone always conquers, even if just a bit; the other always loses, even if just surface wounds— death always comes natural or quick. Then you know: “*It’s all over         but the crying.*” Dad, I’ve been crying, but when will I know “it’s over?” And, since some “folks” aren’t so good after all, please tell:         How victorious is victory?         Who is defeated in defeat?         What is the final score?         Who won again? The true score for when it’s over is perhaps how we make sense of the endings,                                                     beginnings,                                                                           and                                  rebeginnings                 of life shared and                                                                                           solitary. So where is that game clock that tally board, that ledger to release my game announce my endings settle my scores so I can do my crying and prepare for next season?         18.i.11
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62
From the other room I listen as you explain the many, many, many reasons, things, times, and appointments that necessarily mean the end of us The otherness and incidentals of the often forgotten details and to-dos of lives better and happier lived From the other room I listen as you describe your life in words of painful regret, missed opportunities and hopeless futures that don’t exist so very much for me The pain and ingratitude of a poor life disrespect and disregard becoming the ante of daily living From the other room I listen as you check emails and vmails and texts of agreement, refreshment, and immediate joy that shower down from new confidantes not me The pleasure of escaping from the marital mundane dancing and drinking re-becoming the woman admired From the other room I remember the choices we made when agreement was agreeable and available that made lives worth living well The simpleness of a look the knowing confidence day in and day out when someone, You, cared.          10.iii.10
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Mar 5, 2011
Mar 5, 2011 at 3:12 PM UTC
From the Other Room
Flying over Lake Michigan at 20,000 feet in the dark approaching Chicago. When you think about it it’s Improbable. Why do I suddenly feel more secure over land with more to crash into? It’s Irrational. Darling, who is not my darling anymore, flying crashing wondering worrying losing . . . it’s Impossible. But from this perspective as landing gear engages, lights flicker traffic moves Christmas appears in lights and filled holiday mall lots. As our hopes compete I return to you Incomplete. 14.xii.10
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Mar 5, 2011
Mar 5, 2011 at 3:12 PM UTC
Flying to Somewhere
It’s always a strange feeling when the kids pull away on Christmas morning to open anew their presence at mom’s. Only to return indoors from seeing them off to find my more recent kids equally pulling away to play with their new toys and gadgets. Inside, my wife pulls away retreating from years of holiday shopping and cooking and regrets and I retreat to write a poem or virtually connect with others. And I realize that retreat is normal, not a casualty of divorce just refreshing and treating ourselves to quiet rejuvenation. And tomorrow we’ll regroup anew and begin the count toward next year. 25.xii.10
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Mar 5, 2011
Mar 5, 2011 at 3:12 PM UTC
Christmas Morning, 2010
Sitting high atop ****** Mountain I’m feeling my phylogeny overwhelm rationality perturbing stirrings both primitive and powerful considered improper at the moment Surrounded by beauty natural and athletic of heights, valleys, children, and women I’m keenly aware that unnecessary stresses grow into other messes Hours melt to days and I wonder where, how and with whom you are time slips away forgotten feelings dry permanently on the hot summer pavement Ontogeny . . . phylogeny . . . freedom and fear who am I within my existence? to relieve my mind of overthinking I must overcome the fear of underthinking And what say you amid the quiet chaos of our souls beyond putting one foot in front of the other as we fall apart our separate ways?      26.vii.10      ****** Creek, CO)
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Mar 5, 2011
Mar 5, 2011 at 3:12 PM UTC
Summer 2010 Status Updates (a Facebook inspiration)