Sunday, March 18, 2012

In America

I ride in the red Chevy truck of my grandfather,
Bumping along the smoky dirt roads of Sussex County.
I could spot that old truck for miles:
The red, white and blue “Support Our Troops” ribbon,
Sticks crooked next to the yellow Jersey plate.
Bruce Springsteen sings through the Sony radio,
The New Jersey Herald, in its green bag, sits gleaming on the dashboard.
His truck smells of sawdust from the old family business:
Grandpa and Dad build house trusses.
My iPhone, an icon of modern day, buzzes in the pocket of my Levi’s.
It is Grandma calling to tell Grandpa dinner will be ready in ten minutes:
Roast beef, mashed potatoes, and green beans from the garden.
Grandpa pulls a U-ey and heads back up the hill.
We are greeted by my mother and father, my sister and brother,
All here for Sunday night dinner.
At last, Grandpa and I are home.
On Slate Hill.
In America.

Thursday, March 15, 2012

A Quote for Your Day

I came across this quote while doing a project, and I really liked it! Don't forget to lend someone a smile in the hallway today! (:


The only people with whom you should try to get even are those who have helped you.-- John E. Southard

VERY ROUGH draft!

I need help with a title, and comments are always welcome:

Somehow my eyes drift to yours,
In the bustling hallways.
My short attention span
Clings on for just that moment.
I wait for you to turn your head,
Back to see my hopeful eyes.
My heart breaks when I see no return.
And a flood rushes back.
I wish I watered the sprouting
Connection.
The one that started in just one night.
I wish I thought, before
I hastily replied.
Rather I turned away,
Scared, and unsure.
And there I walk,
Head down low.
Just waiting for a reply.

Food for Thought

Comment with your favorite sound. I'll start:
-Rain

Friday, January 20, 2012

A Broken Limb on the Family Tree

The stale air dries my lungs
As I approach the dreadful room.
Who is this stranger
Missing beneath the bandages,
Casts like vines
Stitches the veins of a leaf?
The swollen foot angled upward
Increasing circulation like a rushing brook.
Your arm is caught in the web of a sling,
Eyes hardly peaking through the swollen lids.
The young doctor struts in
A lion amidst his predators.
Instructing me to step aside,
I obey, and sink into the floral armchair
The cheerful material has little affect
On my heavy mind.
Inducing him with chemicals ,
Probing him with steel hardware,
The mysterious man grunts.
Scribbling symptoms in sloppy script,
The doctor glances at a nearby calendar:
Exactly three weeks since the accident.
Looking at me with clinical apathy
A disconnected soul.
He explains the lack of progress
Words streaming into my ears,
Like fireflies innocently floating to their captivity.
Tears boil beneath my quivering lids.
Why were you so foolish,
To make this immature mistake?
Don’t you know how much it hurts,
To see Dad, the looming oak tree,
Silent in the breeze.
Or Mom, the weeping flower,
Wilting beneath the oak tree’s shade.
And don’t forget your broken sister,
The apple plucked before her prime.
The visions of the turning car,
Flash like lightning daily.
I can’t forget the miserable scene,
Cannot help but wonder,
Why not me?
The guilt has piled up,
Like snow in heaps by the river bank.
I pray you make it through,
For I wouldn’t be the same again.
Big brother, with arm in a web,
And stitches like veins,
Come back to us.
To Me.