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Jonathan Reid Nov 2019
I am last Sunday
On the way to the store
And I am calling my mom as I walk
And I'm pushing my cart
From daylight to dark

I am my mother's answer
After four long rings
Can I call you back
in a minute?

I am crossing the street
And I'm between the traffic
And going under the train
And I am the rumbling train

I am my wife's grocery list
I am the apples
And granola bars
Paper towels
And milk
And toilet paper
And I'm the food that I'll buy
To make her this meal
That I've got in my head

I am my mom calling back
And the news of my nephew
Who made the basketball team
And I'm the pride of my nephew
And I'm the strength of the team
And I am getting the milk
And I'm forgetting the toilet paper
But I'm picking up some Asiago cheese
For the pasta I'll make
On Tuesday night

Can I call you back, Mom?
I am getting in line
And don't want to be rude
To the girl at the register
I am the girl at register
But I'm bagging my own groceries
In reusable bags
Because I'm saving the planet

And I'm back home in the kitchen
And I'm sautéing onions
And I'm garlic and salt
And turmeric and water
And rice and chicken stock

And I am waiting to boil
And I am the lid that covers the rice
  Apr 2018 Jonathan Reid
Carl Sandburg
Fog
The fog comes
on little cat feet.

It sits looking
over the harbor and city
on silent haunches
and then moves on.
378

I saw no Way—The Heavens were stitched—
I felt the Columns close—
The Earth reversed her Hemispheres—
I touched the Universe—

And back it slid—and I alone—
A Speck upon a Ball—
Went out upon Circumference—
Beyond the Dip of Bell—
1090

I am afraid to own a Body—
I am afraid to own a Soul—
Profound—precarious Property—
Possession, not optional—

Double Estate—entailed at pleasure
Upon an unsuspecting Heir—
Duke in a moment of Deathlessness
And God, for a Frontier.
Jonathan Reid Apr 2018
I gave a penny for your thoughts,
now the ball is in your court.
I don't need the whole nine yards.
Just make a long story short.

Because actions speak louder than words
and curiosity killed the cat.
So I don't want to count my chickens
before the eggs have hatched.

I can't judge a book by its cover,
and your guess is as good as mine.
But letting the cat of the bag
might be a blessing in disguise.

There's a method to my madness.
just give the benefit of the doubt,
and  let me hear the tall tale
straight from the horse's mouth.
An exercise to write a poem with an idiom in every line.
Jonathan Reid Apr 2018
The ladies at the bakery
know my melody

Coffee
milk no sugar.

The first time I sang for them
they seemed surprised.

What strange notes
without sweetness.

They thought me bitter.

Nobody sang like that
But me.

Now, two years later,
when they see me in the door
we all start singing

And then I’m on my way.
Jonathan Reid Apr 2018
tbh
I’m a teacher
getting older
becoming one of the nameless men
that taught me.

I used to wonder:
Who are these guys
who thought it was a good idea
to come back to school
after they’d escaped?

Some days I’m a mist of adulthood,
hovering over the classroom,
hiding in the cracks in the walls,
ignoring the jokes of my students.

Other days I’m an 8th grader too,
just  
grown taller
and greyer,
balder,
and fatter.
And it hurts
when the other kids don’t like me.
In this poem I try to answer Gwendolyn Brooks' essential questions of poetry: Who are you? and How do you feel about yourself?
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