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Carrie Marie Feb 2012
It is a crisp winter evening in Chicago, and children everywhere are finishing up a day filled with hot cocoa, wet mittens, and NO SCHOOL. A particular family enjoys the evening frolicking in the snow mounds in their front yard. Snow falls softly as a young girl sits on one of the mounds and watches the scene unfold; her family enjoying nature’s wonders. The trees in the yard become delicate, sparkling saplings as the snow falls lightly onto their branches. With yesterday’s snowmen in the yard and garland and twinkling lights strung from the porch railings, the house looks anticipant of Christmas morning. The eldest boy, clad in navy jacket and green pants, works on the finishing touches of his precious snow fort. His younger brother builds an equally satisfying fortress opposite him. Flakes are beginning to fall faster as the father of the family continues on with tedious task of shoveling the never-ending driveway. The snow continues to fall as the youngest daughter lies in the snow flapping her arms like a bird as she makes angels in the snow. As the brothers begin a rigorous snow battle, the youngest child waddles out of the house in a puffy coat, ginormous mittens, and way-too-big boots. He plops down onto the ground next to his sister, and tries imitating her flapping. Every now and then, a car will come by, and the young children pelt it with snowballs, and the driver, very annoyed, honks his horn profusely at them. As the girl watches her family take pleasure in the night, smelling lingering car exhaust and dinner, feeling flakes dust her face, she can’t help but wonder if this will be the one thing she remembers best about her childhood.
Carrie Marie Feb 2012
Days when your eyelids are too weighty to support are a struggle;
full of stolen minutes and seconds of sleep.
When backs are turned and pens are writing,
eyes snap shut for  quick break from reality.
Sweaters turn into cozy blankets,
and dimmed classroom lights become an envelope of darkness to fall into.
Lectures and faces blur
as the windows to the world close in slumber.
Carrie Marie Feb 2012
My heart beats to the rhythm  of life.
Blood courses through my veins,
my brain rules my world
and energy moves me;
I feel alive.

The ground rushes up to greet me as I fall.
My feet find it with a grace not usually shown,
and I continue with my work.
I am painting a picture on the canvas of my imagination.
I am an artist. I am a dancer.

Trees of red and gold line my path.
The sky is as bright as my future,
the water, as wide-open as my heart.
My girls are there; transforming their pain into something beautiful.
Where does it all come from?
But then I know, for I am a seer. I am a believer.

Pouring out of me,
from somewhere hidden in the realms of my mind,
words find their way to the page.
Once in my head, now out for the world to see.
What a vulnerable art!
But that is how it is for a thinker; a writer.

Wishing I could read your mind like a novel,
I realize that I care about you.
How do you feel? What would you say?
Love is a mystery,
even when I want to read non-fiction.
Sometimes I wish it were as concrete as a textbook.
Its thoughts like these that make me a lover, a dreamer.

My heart pulses to the sound of my soul.
Emotion flows in my veins,
my heart rules my world, and impulses move my body.  
I am an artist,
a dancer,
a seer and a believer;
a thinker,
a writer,
a lover and a dreamer.
I am living.
Carrie Marie Feb 2012
I look out through the window pane,
and the sky is coming down.
Flakes flutter to the ground like ashes after flames,
but it is cold.
Fog clouds the edges of the glass
and bits from the heavens come together like a puzzle and blanket the ground.
A world of white forms outside my window
and I am lost in what I see.
I leave the classroom behind and venture out into the world.
Not long after I have stepped through through the glass,
the bell rings and I am consumed once more by reality.

— The End —