Saturday, August 26, 2017

Just to Sleep


 Response to Prompt #26 -- Freestyle

 This is a story based on things I know about the early life of my mother's marriage to my father. She has never made it a secret that she felt she had made a mistake marrying him. The church part is something she told me about recently -- I just embellished details of how she got there. I've really struggled to make this story work, to not try to reveal too much, but to evoke a naive girl who had to grow up fast. (Naive is her word, by the way.) I've thought about it and worked on it for about six months -- not sure there is much left in me.  It is time to say it's done! 



 Just to Sleep

The baby had cried all night, like he had for so many nights. Another Sunday morning was here, and any hope of getting a reprieve from it was once again demolished.



She walked little Johnny around their upstairs apartment, gently rocking him, singing to him, and praying her husband would soon return from church. He should definitely have been back by now. It was bad enough she was alone with the child every day of the week, except for an occasional visit from the downstairs neighbor girl; she had thought weekends would give her a break.



Margo had no idea having a child would be so hard. She had no idea life in a small town would be so dismal. She had no idea that being away from family would bother her.  All she had ever wanted was to get away from Columbus, her stern father and nasty mother. On top of that, being married was not all she had been promised.



She was raw. Isolated. She had made no friends beyond the landlady below. And she probably wasn’t really a friend. They co-existed in the same house and shared the washing machine.



Just when she thought she would go out of her mind waiting, Rich came in, shrugging off his overcoat, and she handed him the baby in record time. Margo was tired of explaining procedures to him – she was just going to hope he remembered what to do, and if he didn’t, who knows? Maybe Johnny would stop being so colicky.



Margo pulled her coat around her and walked up Fifth Street.  She didn’t drive, so taking turns going to church meant she had to walk. Before Johnny was born, church was a place she and her husband felt most at peace.  Now, there was no place like that.



The first Catholic Church Margo came upon was St. Mary’s Ukrainian. She was already late for her church, delayed by Rich, and was cold and tired, so decided this church could do. It didn’t matter – the mass was in Latin, so she would be able to follow.  She ducked into the vestibule. Nothing unusual here on this early November morning – just the dark winter coats of the men and babushkas of the women, something she was now used to living in a highly ethnic area.



The mass began, and Margo followed along well enough. The Kyrie elèison. Christe elèison Kyrie elèison and the Gloria and response prayer: Et cum spiritu tuo.  She looked at the iconic statues, the crucified Christ on the cross over the altar, and the Stations of the Cross on the wall: all familiar touchstones from life as a Catholic.



Then the epistles and gospels were read: in Ukranian.  Margo began to lose her concentration. The voices of the readers rose and fell in a rhythm much like when she rocked and hummed to colicky Johnny. Slowly, lulled by sounds she could not distinguish, the darkness all around her, and the sadness in her spirit, Margo’s eyes drooped and then closed completely.



And she slept the most restful sleep.



Even though someone next to her had to nudge her to go to Communion, Margo was not embarrassed. For once her new life in Pennsylvania she had found a place just for herself, where no one was asking anything of her. A place she could relax and forget all the mistakes she has obviously made.



A place just to sleep.




Tuesday, August 22, 2017

Prompt #26 Free Style--What You Don't Think About


Life is full of new beginnings and do-overs.  I feel as if I'm sitting on a precipice between then and now, before and after, truth or dare.   You never expect a big change, no matter how much you plan for it or know it's coming.  Yes, my daughter is going to school and that's a big change, but I never thought about the "what after".  My life has revolved around her for as long as I can remember.  I can't imagine my life before... before she came into being.  She's such an integral part of my life for, well for ever.

So now what?  Who am I?  What do I do now that I'm not a full time mom anymore?  Where do I go from here?  So many questions plague me because I don't know the answers.  It's as if she and I have the same questions burning within us.  She needs to know what she wants to be when she grows up and I need to know what I want to be when she grows up.

Have I prepared myself for this moment?  NO!  I planned for her a-ha moment, but not mine.  Why would I?  Nobody prepared me for this part.  I can do anything, be anyone... just not full-time mom anymore.  That feels weird, empty.  You hear about people going through the empty nest syndrome, but two weeks later they are on vacation and doing their own thing.  Huh, how do they do that?  I'm certainly not old enough for retirement or rich enough to travel the world.

So now what? Immerse myself in my job?  A new talent or career?  Do I need to change anything or everything?  What is life like after the kiddos grow up... I don't know.  I'm sure I'll figure it out, one day at a time, one new challenge after another.  Maybe.

I've always been the planner, and now I don't know what to plan for.  Such a conundrum, an odd place to be.  Strong I am and strong I will continue to be.  Time to change hats and there are many to choose from.  My next life beckons... what will I become?
Prompt #24
Yes!  I am finally getting around to my Found Poem.  Taken from the Residential Living Checklist that SCAD gave Madison for "what to bring"

Alarm clock
Bed linens, pillows, blankets
Cleaning supplies
Clip light
Clothes hangers
Laundry products
Paper Products
Shower curtain
Throw rugs
Wastebasket
Fan
First Aid kit
Flash light
Memo board
Stationary/stamps




Alarm clock because I can no longer wake you when you ignore the 3 alarms you've set on your phone
Bed linens, pillows, and blankets. Thank god I taught you how to make your bed and do laundry.  You'll do just fine
Cleaning supplies, yes you know how to use them as well... even if you don't like to clean
Clip light. I know you will be up late, hopefully studying and painting... but I know you are growing into a young woman and your late nights are yours.
Clothes hangers... do you know what these are for?
Laundry products.  Please dont leave your clothes in the washer like you do at home.  They will mold just like they do at home.
Paper products.  Now you will know how much toilet paper costs!
Shower curtain.  This too will mold.  Did I teach you that?
Throw rugs.  Ok, you've never had cold feet here in Florida... Georgia will be different.
Waste basket.  They don't empty themselves ya know.
Fan.  You are going to really appreciate the air conditioning at home :)
First aid kit.  I wont be there to kiss your boo boo's any more, but I'm only a call away anytime you need me
Flash light. Think of me... guiding you
Memo board.  I'd love to be a fly on the wall to see all the fun messages your friends will leave.  Send me pics now and then.
Stationary/Stamps.  So old fashioned.  Just snap chat me, or email, or better yet call.  I'll use the stamps to send you care packages full of goodies from home.

I'll miss you so much!  But I am proud of the woman you've become and I'm excited for your new adventure.  Mom will always be here and love you for ever and ever.

Monday, August 7, 2017

The Artist's Way Acrostics

In response to prompt #26, I have reworked and/or created acrostic poems for the Chapter headings from Julia Cameron's the Artist's Way. Over the past eleven weeks, the journey TAW has led me through has caused some important shifts in my mindset--some subtle, some noticeable, some so strong I can feel the ground move beneath me and the sky open up above me.

SAFETY

Sensibility seems to keep us safe,
Allowing us to live a quiet life, but its
Fetters don't permit movement, fail to
Encourage growth,
Tying us to one place, leaving us
Yearning for just a little chaos.

IDENTITY

Individuality gets lost
Deep in our pursuit of the
Enterprises of others, living
Not our dream, but the desires of
Those who surround us. We
Internalize the
Thoughts and ideas poured into us, their
Yammering drowning out our authentic voice.

POWER (an antithesis)

Perhaps our
Optimism
Works against us. Our
Enthusiasm
Renders us defenseless.

INTEGRITY
(This is a backwards acrostic; please read from the bottom up first, then from the top down.)

Indulge your inner child,
Necessary for your growth,
Thrown to the wind--
Expectations of bygone times,
Greet the day with fresh eyes,
Respecting the lessons of the past.
Involve yourself with the present,
Today is before you.
Yesterday is over.

POSSIBILITY

Powerful are the
Opportunities that are
Spread out before us,
Serendipity ours to discover.
Instead, we often
Bind ourselves by lack of
Imagination,
Lie to ourselves that our crazy
Ideas will destroy us, so we
Trade them in for the safety of
Yesterday's successes.

ABUNDANCE

Always
Believe that an
Upswing is
Near.
Determine to
Accept the
Nurturing
Creativity from God,
Embrace His charity.

CONNECTION 1

Consider the possibilities;
Open yourself up to
Novel pursuits,
New adventures,
Exciting experiences.
Consider connections
To nature
Integral
Opportunities to
Nurture your starving soul.

CONNECTION 2 (an antithesis)

Constantly searching for approval from
Others,
Neglecting to search within,
Needing validation for
Each move,
Creating an environment of
Tension,
Interested in listening to
Only the messages you think you
Need to hear.

STRENGTH

Sabotage comes in many forms,
Tip-toeing in unnoticed--until the
Ripples of discontent run through
Every aspect of your life.
Now is the time to trust your
Gut feelings, listen to your intuition;
That is where the power lies,
Hidden away but ready to rise again.

COMPASSION

Considering the vulnerability of others, the exact
Opposite of
Malice, compassion requires a
Purposeful determination to
Accept people and
Situations for what they are, to
Stop blaming
Individuals for the
Outcomes
None of us can really control.

SELF-PROTECTION

Swords drawn against the insidious
Enemy, the One who threatens to ruin your
Life. She charges at you with a
Fury you have been blind to for so long.
-
Provoked by a new bravery, a
Realization that your thoughts and
Opinions do matter, that your
Theories have a place in this world.
Egocentric as it may seem to others, you
Carve out much-needed and much-deserved
Time for yourself--defending it to the death--to reclaim your
Identity--whether they like it or not.
Oppressed no more, you greet and nurture your
New existence like the newborn you once held lovingly in your arms.

AUTONOMY

Angst builds and threatens to
Unravel us thread by thread.
Taking full responsibility for
Our own destiny becomes a
Nagging desire that too
Often gets buried under the seemingly
Magnanimous philosophy of someone else's creation, one we
Yield to in our moment of weakness.

FAITH

Forget all that you thought you knew, for
Although their well-meaning
Intentions were not designed to harm you,
The only true path to belief requires you to
Harness the power of the Great Creator for yourself.

Daily Grind

Response to prompt #25. I love Canty's story and simply tried to mimic a bit of his writing style.

My work is challenging. I pack a bag, rent a car, load the car, plug in my iPod and set out on the open road. Really, not so open. More like under construction and filled with traffic. The commuters and tourists battle it out in will and in lane space. I drive. I stop for a Starbucks coconut milk mocha macchiato for a caffeine buzz and a sugar boost. Sometimes I also get egg white bites for protein. I know the best places to stop for gas and the exits to avoid like the plague. Mobil, cleanest bathrooms. RaceTrac, best beverage and candy selection. Ellentown too fucking crowded.

I wonder why traveling makes me so tired. Some days I drive more than I work. I take calls. I do Skype meetings. All in the car. I am often late or early because my life is dictated by the flow of traffic. I'm learning to live with it. It doesn't bother me much. I am working. I share hotel lobbies with people on vacation. They swim, and I work. They sleep in, and I head out. I am sometimes lodged in a room beside the elevator. The manager asks at check-out how she can make it up to me after I've lost a night's sleep because of the whirring of the up and down and the clunk from the landing on each floor. Not just my floor. All the floors. "Nothing, really" I answer. I've lost a night's sleep not my sense of decency. I don't need a free room or a complimentary breakfast. Just sleep. "Maybe I'll just make a note to myself to request rooms away from the elevator," I say to her mirroring her politeness. And people. Especially hallway relay-racing kids, I think to myself.

I tell everyone I'm doing fine. I think I am, because I love my job. There are signs though. Out of character signs of fatigue and the need for some time off, maybe a vacation. And all these feelings of passion and accomplishment about my work, they make it hard to admit the truth. I'm tired. It's a good tired. But tired nonetheless. I need to learn to say no sometimes. I am multi-tasking too much and losing track of my things. On my most recent trip, I lost my iPad. I know. And I lost my designer sunglasses. Costas my husband bought me for my birthday. I lost track. I don't even know if my things are lost or were stollen. It doesn't matter. Both are gone. Signs from the universe to slow down.  It's ok to lose material things. Not so much your mind or your life.

Note to self: Slow down. Pay attention. Keep your head in the game. It's okay to pull off the road,  and take in the daybreak. Or a vast green field with an open blue sky. Or a unique cloud formation. Or the salty air exhaled by a shimmery waterway. Nature makes her own schedule. So do I. If we meet up once in awhile, I for one, will never be lost.

Tuesday, August 1, 2017

Prompt #26 August Free Choice

It is a super busy time for all of us.  In order to relieve some of the writing pressure, this month we will do FREE CHOICE.  This means you won't have to tailor your message to any specific prompt.

Post anything this month that you have written now or in the past.  It can be as short as a haiku, or as long as a literary analysis. Your choice.  Think of it as a jukebox: will you play an oldie, or something more recent?  Do you want us to hear a song we haven't heard before?

Hopefully, this will give everyone a chance to catch their breath. Go through old notebooks. Get creative.  Look for something to share.  Write it!