Taking a Chance on Poetry

I love poetry.  I took 3 semesters of it in college (although that always troubled me, since I figure truly brilliant poets don't have to try that hard).  I haven't written in years - I somehow have been too tired, or busy, or bloggy to even try.

Yesterday, in a rare moment of leisure (between pajama parties, book fairs and girl scout cookies) something came to me.  Recently, the only poetry I have read belongs to the past poet laureate, Ted Kooser, and I like the humanity of his work.

I am going to take a risk, and put it out there, as inspired by Ted.  



I am chewing gum. 

Like a waitress,

who is bored and unhappy

about the turn her life has taken since she met

the wrong man. 

Married him.  Bore him

two unforgiving children. 

Lost them.  Not literally, of course.

But spiritually, through years of letting the wrong man

do his wrong things. 

Saying nothing. 

Now, the kids can’t even look her in the eye

And they are acting wrong themselves.

She knows she should be filling salt,

making too-black coffee,

using her damp, gray rag to wipe

the sticky ketchup bottles, or the split plastic seats,

but she only has the energy to chew this gum. 

Loudly. 

With anger.  Sure of nothing

but the gum.

 
Trackbacks
  • Trackbacks are closed for this entry.
Comments

Leave a comment

 Enter the above security code (required)

 Name

 Email (will not be published)

 Website

Your comment is 0 characters limited to 3000 characters.