#softball
I thought I’d be smited, right then and there
The red gravel spilling into the dugout
Was now plastic aquarium rocks
I was in a bowl, drowning underwater
It felt like drowning a lot of the time I was out there
Mostly because I was easily distracted and couldn’t play softball for ****
When Paige kissed me, I cried
Now, those pieces of red dirt
were a hellfire beneath me.
My religious upbringing was the kind that’s secretly stifling. The kind that permeates so deep that to act against it is to act against yourself.
This generational inherited catholic guilt.
The idea that I should be unimportant and unassuming and sinning was important in a bad way.
I knew I would only get one trip to the bathroom per service, I planned it carefully each week
So that it would take the most time
So I could stand in the great hall and twiddle my thumbs
As we were forbidden to re-enter the chapel while the father was speaking
I am forbidden from many things as a child.
I’m forbidden from tears as if I’m not important enough to have them.
I am not stone and my tears are not blood. I am not a miracle. I am not a sight to behold. I am not a message from god.
I am not the prophetic ****** Mary in my mother’s dreams the night a relative passes.
I am not allowed to love without meaning.
When Paige kissed me I cried.
I had to tell everyone in t-ball that I was 5 when I was only 4 because my mother wanted me to start a year early.
I hid the sign up forms they gave us at school each year, but my mom would register me in person.
Every year she’d tell me, just one more year, this can be the last one.
This went on for nine years.
After I made my first communion. I asked to quit
I had to study five more years to make my confirmation sacrament, effectively promising I’d stay in the church,
before my mother would let me leave.
The irony was lost on her.
When Paige kissed me I cried.
What a cruel way to hurt someone. This was worse than the tripping, the taunting, the terrorizing.
Her tenderness.
I often wondered why she treated me as she did—I was already an ugly duckling, a left fielder, a loser.
Her mom was the coach, and she was the best on the team. They all listened to her, which meant they all hated me.
She’d call me a **** and pull my hair.
When paige kissed me, I cried
Why couldn’t it have been anyone else, why not natalie johnston
I never told anyone else, I decided it wasn’t my secret to share.
But I am tired of keeping secrets of what people who hate me did to my body.
Retrospectively, it’s easy to try to be flattered. I’m sure it was hard and weird for her to have those feelings.
I’m sure she expressed them as well as she could.
But I didn’t want Paige to kiss me.
I WANTED Paige to stop calling me a ****
I wanted her get hit in the face with a softball
and I wanted it to shove her nose into her brain.
And I wanted her to die.
And
I prayed for her to die.
Dec 3, 2020
Dec 3, 2020 at 4:52 PM UTC
paint—
on my brushes
my jeans
your shirts
on my arms
my fingers
your cheeks—
i'll be working
part-time
at the gallery, and
sweat—
on your neck
your shirt
my hoodie
on your skin
your jaw
my lips—
you'd be looking
at offers
to go pro.
i'll sell my paintings
but checks will only get me
oh so far, so
my wallet would be nearly
empty of dollar bills,
but with you,
my heart would be nearly
full of sunshine,
as long as i'm with you.
hell, i'll buy the
sunshine for you
if i could. and
i'll paint it on the canvas
(acrylic paint, mind you)
and i'll have it hung
up for display,
for you, for the world,
for everyone to see.
i'll come to your DI
games and
cheer for you,
would you come to the
gallery openings
and support me, too?
make art,
make love,
i guess.
Dec 6, 2019
Dec 6, 2019 at 8:15 PM UTC
Staring at the man
who wishes
for me to
sit down
I will crush it
that spherical demon
high strung with
cotton twine and pleather
Throw at me, bro!
Gaussian function
calculated velocity
ready to strike
Don't cross my domain
this is my house!
my sneer gets sneerier
my grip intensifies
KAPOWzawazzzzA!
the earth quakes
my energy released
Sixty feet to victory!
I move like the wind
of hurricane force
I feel a POP!
Thirty feet to saftey
I limp
back home
I'm too old for
this $hit!
Heat and ice
twice thrice
doctor's reason
out for the season
Sep 10, 2018
Sep 10, 2018 at 3:25 PM UTC
I came only to watch one person eyes open and peeled.
The Blonde Bombshell was her name and O, what power did she wield!
One look and the explosion of her beauty could soften any heart of steel.
I knew nothing of softball besides the name,
but the blonde pitcher inspired me to change my game.
As I watched she seemed nervous on the softball mound.
Her first few pitches practically never left the ground.
The game continued and she pitched better in each inning.
Each throw as beautiful as she was and secured her team in winning.
She looked more confident as she began to smile.
Sending each batter back to the bench crying like a child.
As I prepared to leave I waved my farewell.
To a blonde beauty who looked and pitched exceptionally and gracefully well.
Jun 12, 2016
Jun 12, 2016 at 10:23 PM UTC
stirred deeply with joy
enthralled with the spirit
we return to Elysian fields
to live autumnal reveries
we prance once more
onto blue sky diamonds
with hometown heroes
to pitch perfect games
knock long grand slams
to honor and embrace
the semblance of siblings,
parents, lovers and friends
life's teammates
our dearest playmates
passed and still here
sustaining our spirit
filling the void of
riven hearts
with nothing more than
a smiling presence,
compliant ear
a warm embrace
keeping a
season of sunshine
alive for one more
golden day
in a resplendent moment
Measy’s youngest son
stood before me
as if it were him
five decades ago
his impish smile,
mischievous eye
and olive skin
wrinkled when
he grinned
your Old Man
was a hell
of a ball player
a great hitter
he always swung down
at the pitch, hitting
nasty line drives
I remember that
summer afternoon
when we first met on
the Washington School
Merry-Go-Round...
Measy just up
from Carolina
he spoke with
a slow Tar Heel drawl
we didn't know what
to make of him
so we made him
our friend
Sifford's Esso, B&D;
and Bulldog teammates
I marveled at his athleticism
but the thing I remember
most was the soft joviality of...
“ ah hoot,
ah hoot.
ah hoot”
his laugh would send
a soft almost ********
shudder through his body
Measy lives in me,
forever in my heart
I embraced young Roy
touched his cheek
a transcendent moment
that spans a half century
At first base
Gail “Peppermint Patty” Q
was scooping up grounders
and not letting anyone past her
without giving them a smile or a hug….
asking each player if their shirt fit right…
the way Gail played
she could start for
the Lady Gaels today...
on the mound
Moons was wearing
a Schmeds shirt
lobbing lollipops to the hitters…..
making sure everyone got on base…
at short Screwball
covering half the ground
he once did..
(never a ss but a classic junk baller,
never threw a pitch that you could hit)
but on this day his heart was filled
overflowing with the karma
of good works and his love for
Rutherford and its favorite
sons and daughters
who have gone on before….
other stars abounded on the field and off…
Noons cracked everyone up
with an endless stand-up routine
Skip walloped a few dingers
BL looked sharp in his Foster Grants
and Andy was looking good
destined for the next cover of GQ….
Coach Way gave a resounding pep talk…
the need to grow up and show up
with an attitude of gratitude will
always make one a winner
regardless of the score
in the stands I heard a hundred stories
about the prowess and foibles of departed friends…
Bay Bay’s HR smash that put Flash Cleaners
into the World Series
A cool Moose bringing the ball across
half court, driving and dumping one off to Head
for the go ahead points against Queen of Peace
Minnow ruling a territory that included Morse Ave,
Wood Street up to Chopper’s House and
half of the Washington School playground
Fic being the smallest Bulldog with the largest heart
ran over linebackers and tackled fullbacks twice his size
Weehawken Joe draining a jumper
from the top of the key to keep it close
at the Union Hill pit…
as the list of the departed was read by Gail, Pat, John and Jimmy
the depth of our loss was only exceeded by the magnitude of love
a caring community extends to one another….
Rutherford is indeed a very special place….
so many caring friends
so many good thoughts
the blessing of friendship
the grace of presence
as I turned to leave
I thought I saw
Nick and Joe
hanging with
Sweet Lou
the hog was
humming
his red bandanna
was flapping
in a rising breeze
Aaron Copland:
Our Town
Righteous Brothers
Unchained Melody
Whitney Houston:
I Will Always Love You
Oakland
Dia De Muertos
2015
Thank you Pat Francke, Jimmy Noonan, Gail Wilhelm Quinn and John Mooney for putting this beautiful event together….
My apologies for not mentioning all the beloved souls so honored at this game…..Know that all are deeply loved and equally missed…..
If anyone has a memory they would like included please add in comments section and it will be incorporated in future versions…..
Also if anyone has a list of the names would like to add that to this….
God Bless
Nov 7, 2015
Nov 7, 2015 at 1:11 PM UTC
I drop four ice cubes into my coke out of habit.
I kiss my sweet love four times for good luck so our team can win the game.
I catch myself counting to four when Im ready to speak up, I don't count to three or even ten I count to four.
It was on my back in big white letters when dad looked through the chain linked fence and said with every ounce of his pride "Take it for a ride lex."
That's the day I got my first homerun.
That's my old man's favorite number and mine too.
Ill never know why I look at him like hes god.
He spelt my name wrong two years back.
The letters said L-e-x-i,
I whispered that's not how you spell my name it's spelled L-e-x-i-e.
I whispered because I didn't want to embarrass him, I thought if I talked quiet enough no one could see my lips break around the words in shock.
I was 5 when me and mom left him.
The number 5 is my most unlucky number it always takes something from me, like my dog, she was in my arms on the fifth of may when heaven called for her to go home.
Dad came the next day to burry her, the hole he dug was to shallow.
Days after her funeral foxes came and
scattered her bones across the field.
It was a treasure hunt to find all of them, I tried to save her one last time.
I should really give that man a call.
I'll do it tomorrow , or I'll wait for him to call.
I'll count to four before I answer.
Jul 23, 2014
Jul 23, 2014 at 4:50 AM UTC