Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
When I was just a child, they were just a married couple; Older, middle-aged, nothing distinguishing about them at all. I loved swimming in their swimming pool, Until they upsized, to a glitzy neighborhood of rambling, Ranch-style houses. And they upscaled, to exotic, foreign vacations. Brought me back a Hawaiian volcanic stone, with emerald flecks, A salt and pepper shaker set from Israel. She was a clothes horse, always kept her figure, Dressed slinky but classy, for an old babe; Visibly stood taller, if another woman Ever complimented her clothing or style- And they invariably did. My dad said that when alone with her husband, That man would brag about daily ******** From his office receptionist, at the end of the workday Before going home. I was older then, tried to imagine How the shared exchange could have furthered Some ancient, nightly excavated ambition? Alone with her once, my dad said he made an innuendo, Some playful joke which he had since forgotten the point of, Probably due to the more stunning reaction it caused. He had always loved teasing with words, But he said that she had dropped all suggestion of pretense, And she had told him then, You couldn't handle it.. He still chuckled about it, long after the fact. Funny how for all those years, what I remembered seeing Was a mostly colorless couple Who always drove large Cadillacs. And how in the later years, he could only move While tethered to his oxygen tank, Though it never hindered his smoking.
0
Aug 23, 2010
Aug 23, 2010 at 12:11 PM UTC
The Secret Lives of Others
When I was just a child, they were just a married couple; Older, middle-aged, nothing distinguishing about them at all. I loved swimming in their swimming pool, Until they upsized, to a glitzy neighborhood of rambling, Ranch-style houses. And they upscaled, to exotic, foreign vacations. Brought me back a Hawaiian volcanic stone, with emerald flecks, A salt and pepper shaker set from Israel. She was a clothes horse, always kept her figure, Dressed slinky but classy, for an old babe; Visibly stood taller, if another woman Ever complimented her clothing or style- And they invariably did. My dad said that when alone with her husband, That man would brag about daily ******** From his office receptionist, at the end of the workday Before going home. I was older then, tried to imagine How the shared exchange could have furthered Some ancient, nightly excavated ambition? Alone with her once, my dad said he made an innuendo, Some playful joke which he had since forgotten the point of, Probably due to the more stunning reaction it caused. He had always loved teasing with words, But he said that she had dropped all suggestion of pretense, And she had told him then, You couldn't handle it.. He still chuckled about it, long after the fact. Funny how for all those years, what I remembered seeing Was a mostly colorless couple Who always drove large Cadillacs. And how in the later years, he could only move While tethered to his oxygen tank, Though it never hindered his smoking.
patti-masterman-heterodynemind
Written by
Aug 23, 2010
Aug 23, 2010 at 12:11 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem