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2.9k · Mar 2012
The Lawn Therapist
Beth C Mar 2012
Hey there, you, driving the lawnmower,
sitting atop your shiny red toy--
state of the art, the best of the best
in lawn technology.

My meager fields are no longer in disarray
since you came around;

Tell me, Mr. Lawnmower,
Do the aspiring clovers and rogue dandelions irritate you?

Is their determination to survive a mere inconvenience,
Or is that the slight trickle of fear running down your back?

What about the bird's nest perched perilously in the gutter
and the rusted horseshoes nesting in my flower bed?
The disused swing set, now eroding in my backyard?

I rather like my own personal jungle!

Still, I suppose someone has to trim the branches
that hang over the power lines.

The poison ivy sneaking its way toward the roof
needs an occasional reminder
of the terms of our uneasy truce.

Perhaps I need you after all.
2.7k · Apr 2012
For Icarus
Beth C Apr 2012
We cling to the paper skin of the earth
because it may throw us off tomorrow.
Watch closely, Observe:

The grasping hands find one another,
fitting together like pieces of an old puzzle.

The gleam of a tear in the dark,
the arms of a father encircling his child;
these are the last whispers of an endangered race.

The earth may throw us off tomorrow
and dance in the sunlight on the next day.
Expect no pity, no compassion;

Even the tenderest kisses sear the skin.
2.1k · Apr 2012
Sunglasses
Beth C Apr 2012
The world is the color of day-old coffee
and copper coins;
The same metallic edge lingers
in our mouths.

The woman masked by the browning lenses is a queen,
walking in disguise among these mortals.

They sense this
They feel the awe and wonder
mixing with secretive disdain--

the whispers which invariably shadow royalty.
Beth C Feb 2013
I go back to the old house, down off Harper Road and across from the old bakery. The paint is green now and the shutters look as if they would like to peel off the sides of the windows and float down the street. I stand there on the curb. I say, “This is my childhood home,” and it sounds like a lie. Then, “I used to live here.” Finally, “I don’t live here anymore.” That one’s better, truer, but it still sounds like a warning.

I find a neighbor too, a little older woman with reddish hair and beautiful pearl earrings, and I ask, “Do you remember a little girl who used to live here?”

“No,” she says, “you know how it is with neighbors these days, no one ever stops to say hello.”

I resist the urge to say hello; we talk about the weather. When she asks if I was the little girl, I lie. I don’t have a particular reason for this, but the knowing glint in her eyes irritates me. I talk about a cousin, an old acquaintance I wanted to find.

“Genealogical research,” I say, “a hobby,” and I keep lying until the woman with the pearls is no longer curious, or paying attention. I do not remember what I say; there are certain kinds of lies no one is ever particularly curious about after you tell them once.

I wait a polite amount of time and then I go back to the Motel 6. The girlish, conventional corner of my mind is whispering sadly. What a shame, she says, no one here remembers you.

The rest of me is a woman, vindictive and satisfied. Good, she says, and means it. If she had her way, she would burn the house to the ground like so much tinder and be done with it. A better ending than this, she says. She’s smiling; she thinks I should have slapped the lady with the pearls right across her ugly face, there in the middle of the street. You and me, she says, we don’t get paradise, but we’re old enough to choose our own hell. You and me, baby, we get a choice.

I light a cigarette in the dingy motel bathroom. It’s the first I've had in days and as close to paradise as anything else I know. I study myself in the ancient mirror, unfortunately positioned on the wall over the porcelain toilet. I say it out loud, testing the words, watching them weave through the smoke. “A better ending,” I say, and I try very hard to mean it.
1.6k · Jan 2013
Egyptian Blue
Beth C Jan 2013
It's fourth grade recess,
I'm standing behind the white chalk lines
drawn onto the asphalt,
watching other kids win.

Some nameless ten-year-old
with curly red hair and shiny black shoes
is telling me about blood—
If it never touches the air
it is blue as the ocean.
I've never seen an ocean
and I believe him anyway.

Years pass,
and I'm still standing
behind someone else’s chalk lines.
I've long since passed biology
graduated from fairy tales,
though sometimes,
late at night
I still imagine blue blood
pumping in my arms,
curling lazily under my fingertips.
I've seen the ocean now
and I know better than to believe anything.

It's years later,
and I'm drawing my own chalk lines
across the mirror over the sink,
staring into myself.
I know better, I do,
but I imagine that my blue eyes
are filled up with blue blood.
If I cry hard enough,
I will stain my cheeks with cobalt
and the chalk will crumble against my face,
leaving stars burnt out and lost
in the sea of blue.

And the whole world will know
that I've seen the ocean,
the whole world will understand
that I bled myself dry.
A bit rough, suggestions appreciated.
1.6k · Mar 2012
Love #346
Beth C Mar 2012
I fall in love at least once every day
And twice a day on weekends.

I once fell for the sun and the moon
on the same glittering, empty night;
And I was so happy that day that I didn't even care
when you called me strange.

I have loved the delirious grey of the ocean before a storm,
the taste of chocolate on cloudless nights,
the vicious crack of lightning over the roof,
So I didn't care if I wasn't a part of any of your stories.

I loved the neighborhood stray, with all its feral grace and matted fir,
I loved the fields of waving grass even while the sun beat down on me,
I loved that ridiculous tie you wore yesterday,
All so I wouldn't have to love you.

On my darker nights,
I loved the flash of glass as it shattered against the wall,
the shine of the knives in the bottom of the drawer,
the sweet, dim glow of the brown bottle under the sink;
They all tempted me more than you ever did.

Sunsets and sunrises
Bug bites and bee stings
Poetry in the springtime
And the taste of popcorn in darkened theatres.
Rain on the rooftop

And mostly,
you.

You see, I have a problem,
A bad habit, if you will.
I only love things
that cannot love me.
1.6k · Apr 2012
Razors and Icicles
Beth C Apr 2012
I think
even the sun must die
a little, every day
when it rises

To face you
and hear you laugh
not like the world
is ending,
but that it never
existed at all.

And I think,
sometimes,
that razors
and icicles
and empty midnight beaches
have nothing on you.
1.5k · Mar 2012
Self-reference
Beth C Mar 2012
This is a haiku
Or so the poet assumes
One can't be too sure
Sorry, I couldn't resist......
1.4k · Apr 2012
Love Personified
Beth C Apr 2012
I am the wallpaper
and the weather
or
the setup
for a good joke.

When you fail
to notice me,
and all passes without comment,
then (only then)
things are as they should be.
Sometimes I like to write the opposite of what I really believe-- I am an excellent liar.
1.3k · Jan 2013
Mussels
Beth C Jan 2013
Time comes in waves,
is measured in pulses of light and dark.
Not true light, mind, but this is how I imagine it--
the tightness and then the sigh as some pressurized valve loosens.
I have never seen true light,
but the sands whisper of it longingly
as they tell their tales of something rare and precious.
I envy them their fluid existence,
swept up in a sea of that which is greater than themselves.
I am a solitary being, tough and hardened,
built to endure rather than enjoy.
This is something I wrote as a part of a group writing exercise a few months ago. We were given an animal and told to write something from its perspective. As an aside, I know nothing about mussels, so this is a pretty loose interpretation of the prompt.
1.2k · Jan 2013
The Shell Game
Beth C Jan 2013
A shell
is a wonderful thing to have,
if you can carry it.

This is not the world
where I had wanted to live,
I had not hoped
for deserts and desertions
and gilded cages,

a world where the tortured tortoise
can no longer be sure
if armor imprisons
or protects.

There is a version of this story,
where slow and steady wins the race--
that was another age, a different world,
and in our story they run for their lives
and no one wins.

Bullets and arrows are streaming through the air
and the world tastes like mud,
and this is not about virtue anymore.

The hare is fast
but his skin is thin,
he is too soft for our story.
There is no room for knowing smirks
and this is not about speed.

You want winners and losers,
you want a moral,
you want something like salvation
or a punchline.
You say it's the least I could do for you,
after all this trouble.

And I say I'm sorry, I'm sorry,
but the tortoise survives,

and isn't that a consolation,
isn't that something?
1.1k · Mar 2012
The Litany of Candles
Beth C Mar 2012
I recall the delicate flickering under the steepled sky
Always with the slight taste of sorrowful smoke.

No more.
Now leaden flames flash in the semi-dark,

The glow of childhood or childishness
Replaced in favor of some mechanical impostor.

A penny for your thoughts sir,
A quarter for your prayers.

Say what you will
About waxen tears and the sting of smoke,
At least there was a record
And you knew how it stood.
1.1k · Dec 2012
Topography (revised version)
Beth C Dec 2012
Stars and sins are swimming
all through my head;
Pain is shooting through my streets
and blurring my maps;

Some sweet poison
may well be flowing in the underground,
these veins of gold.

Underwater explosions stain
my pale ocean's surface,

I am big as a planet,
Baby, I am bleeding magma
burning like hell
or so many cigarettes,
I want out, I am caught
in my own gravity well.

Stars and sins are swimming
all through my heart,

all over the world
I am dragging down innocence
and pumping up oil.
1.1k · Apr 2012
Last night
Beth C Apr 2012
Under the ancient sofa
among the kingdom of skittish dust bunnies,
I searched that strange underworld
of my living room.

I looked behind the refrigerator,
found old bits of a doughnut
and some new species of insect
and the toenail clippers.

Next to the oldest pile of boxes
in the dampest section of the basement,
found three oddly colored socks
and an ant's nest.

I searched the whole house--
I found no words.

Nothing for the sight of you,
walking away
as the clouds melted
and poured from the sky.
1.1k · Mar 2012
This is a house of cards.
Beth C Mar 2012
Watch your step, sweetheart,
lest the whole tangled deck come crashing down.
These are not ordinary cards,
these are lead,
these are steel,
these are gold-plated darkness
and they will crush your fragile soul.
Fail, even for one second, to guard those hearts
and they will **** without hesitation.
There is no floor plan, no secret salvation.
This is a shoddy house,
built on a foundation of failures,
held together by good intentions,
fenced in by hope.
Beth C Apr 2012
Everyone keeps
a special smile
hidden under their mattress
or next to the night-stand,
reserved specially for
the special ones.

However,
according to scientists or
romantic comedy writers
or whoever knows
anything about these things,

the problem arises because
everyone wants the one person
who can't be had;

So we all die a little every day
and everyone thinks
secretly
that maybe they
are really going crazy,
this time,

And the voices
in their heads
just
might
be right,

And what if
there is no special smile,
reserved specially for us?
All because everyone is afraid to reveal their own smile to someone else....
1.1k · Apr 2013
Non-transformative
Beth C Apr 2013
For my young princes,

don't start your searches in a swamp:
toads kissed and coddled are still toads,
broken mirrors draped with silk are still broken,
the knife sticky with love is still a knife

sorry, so sorry, my sons
but a story you love is still a story
don't ask me for magic books,
maps to the underworld,
a talking horse

a broken girl is still a girl,
also still broken;
sorry about the locks
they won't magically open
990 · Jan 2013
Almost Oxygen
Beth C Jan 2013
I can feel the music swirling inside,
Splashing up against the glass,
splitting apart,
Explosions in miniature
knocking around inside my head.

If I turn over the tumbler,
will the notes spill out,
wash the floor,
cool my heels as a liquid blessing?
an offering to the first god who’ll take it—
I’m not picky anymore.

Or will it stay, suspended
in this rarefied atmosphere,
an elixir of life, almost oxygen,
not quite enough to breathe?

If I get close enough,
the notes will knit themselves into my bones
pour through this frail skin
and remake me into a creature fluid and beautiful.

I can hear my mother’s voice,
“Turn off the music,” she says,
“I can’t think through all the noise.”
But I also hear a promise—
Just give me this,
my heaven, drowned in light.

Just let me get close enough,
let me break the glass against your floor,
And I will take the blood and the glass,  
I will weave you a castle,
And this one, finally, this one, will be right.
And we could disappear inside.

Yes, make me into a storm or a song or a broken glass,
turn me into a handgun or a time machine or
those last few stitches in the kind of wound that wouldn't heal.

And I will forget, I will be what I promised,
when we were young, and still remembered the old prayers.
956 · Apr 2012
Curtains and Lampshades
Beth C Apr 2012
This is the illusion
of flowered wallpaper
and flowerless vases,

the masked truth
behind luxurious lampshades
and towering bookcases;

Do not be fooled
by the furniture,
this house is as empty
as they come.
914 · Apr 2012
Imaginary you
Beth C Apr 2012
Like
peppermint
and cigarette smoke,
with a hint of Novocaine.
Another ten word poem!
911 · May 2012
Topography
Beth C May 2012
Stars and sins are swimming
all through my head;

Pain is shooting through my streets
and blurring my maps;

The taste of some sweet poison
may well be flowing
in the underground,
these veins of gold.

Surely,
even an underwater explosion
must be reflected
on the my pale ocean's surface.
867 · Apr 2012
Between the Lines
Beth C Apr 2012
The fanciful girl with hair in curlers
laughs at her inverted existence.

We dream to make the world more interesting,
her only moral absolute.

The plastic diamond necklaces
are chains around her neck,
red lipstick is a garish neon sign
erected for the benefit of the blind.

All the red silk scarves in the world
can't buy the attention
of the one you want.


The child in the mirror laughs;
she is not yet accustomed
to my particular brand of self-denial.

For her, each slight glance is a tender caress.
She passes unnoticed for pages,
fading carefully from view.

Each mention is a resurrection,
a new life for the invisible girl
who wears her red dress
as an advertisement.
848 · Apr 2012
A Daughter at Sunset
Beth C Apr 2012
Sweet rind of the old orange,
the smell of fruit rotting
under the tangerine sun,

Rust covered doors
and barren floors--
Enter at your own risk.

Streams run red
with blood and broken memories
and the strawberry girl
laughs by the riverbank.

The bitter, coppery sound
rolls through the sinking sky.

Who says the sun must come up tomorrow,
and you must love again?

The golden girl wears silver armor
and drags a rusted sword behind her.
I was trying for something different from what I typically write-- more abstract or symbolic than usual. Please tell me what you think. Did you know what I was talking about? What is your own interpretation? Please share!
837 · Apr 2012
The Paper Girl
Beth C Apr 2012
I am a paper girl.

I apologize too quickly,
sending rushed sorries as
the response to imagined offenses,
as if to cancel out my existence.

I am white and pale and blank
as an unstained sheet of paper--
pure only in the most superficial manner.

My coloring marks a lack of creativity,
a "promising future,"
devoid even of the virtue
found in failed attempts.

I am flat and two-dimensional,
my surface marred
only by the unwanted sensation
of crackling loneliness.
A rushed poem-- I wrote this in about fifteen minutes. Any feedback you have is appreciated. Thanks!
731 · Apr 2012
The Caterpillar Question
Beth C Apr 2012
Does quivering fear
or bursting anticipation
cause your miraculous transformation?
Yet another ten word poem. (I tried rhyming this time...)
671 · May 2012
A Question of Pity
Beth C May 2012
To which
the siren
replied,

You may
call me
cynical,

but
I
have
survived.
651 · Mar 2012
Glass Houses
Beth C Mar 2012
"People living in glass houses
shouldn't throw stones"

Fine.
I wouldn't want to live in your glass house anyway
Go ahead, throw your stones, shatter these windows.

I want to dance among the ruins
and hear your laughs ringing through the emptiness.

I want to watch as the shards scatter into the atmosphere
and rain down on us
while the blood red sun fades.

Break down the glass walls,
Burn the bridges--

Watch me fall.
562 · May 2012
Fall Ashes
Beth C May 2012
Quick lightning chases,
eyes follow the fragile leaf,
the poor frail creature.
This haiku parallels "Spring Flames." I hope you read both, but it's not really necessary to understanding the meaning. Enjoy. (I would also really appreciate any feedback you have about whether the two poems work better together or separately.)
503 · May 2012
An apology
Beth C May 2012
I wrote you a poem.

I would write
a poem, a story,
a chapter, a book,
a whole **** library,
a universe
if I knew how.

Forget the poem,
unless it would make you smile
for a moment,
knowing I
(foolish girl)
cared enough
to write it.

Except,
I don't know how
to escape from
my helpless
skin

or to force my way
out of that
awful box

And

I am being selfish, again,

because I don't really know anything.
This is a bit different, because I wrote it as a letter for a friend of mine, who will probably never read it.
497 · Apr 2012
A Summer's Day
Beth C Apr 2012
Sunrise lips, sunset eyes:

She laughs,
Nobody owns the sun.
This was written for the ten word poem collection.
475 · May 2012
Spring Flames
Beth C May 2012
Shadow embraces,
the girl steps like spring, dancing
while the embers catch.
Haiku

— The End —