I Remember

I’m still mulling over all the memories of my childhood that the wash day story dug up from the dusty corners of my mind. My memories range from happy and innocent to dark and terrifying. Mostly I shy away from the more painful memories and pull up the pleasant, like my version of wash day I posted last week. Painful memories have a place and next week I will post about that but for this week another poem; one about some of my happier memories.

This poem was first published in the 2013 Mind’s Eye; the student literary magazine of Johnson County Community College.

When I was Young

When I was young, I had to choose, dress up and stay in the house or
run barefoot through the fields, wild and free as rain,

through field after field -- barking dogs to bouncing rabbits
to wild wind and clouds -- through tall grass and weeds

cows startled and stared at our passing, sometimes
deer, dogs jumping and tumbling, trailing after, following then leading

falling into a heap under a tree, bodies flopping, tongues lolling,
tails wagging in rhythm, opened book in hand, one page

or ten read, words blurred by lacy patterns of leaves,
of shade and sun instead, then off again to nowhere in particular.

Or somewhere, hunting treasure beyond the next meadow
and finding it in the sun and wind and the sheer joy of life.

I tried to dress and act like a lady but dishes and dolls and conversation 
cannot compare to wind and rain

and the joy of a pack of dogs and a half wild girl running,
released into the long days of summer, blowing with the wind,

following the sun across the sky, almost catching it. Sometimes
I'd stop and stare at the house, thinking of my sister

seeing a shadow as she walked across a room, wondering
at a different world sheltered within the walls, but never

voluntarily returning to the captivity of the house, rather
dreaming of forever, free and wild. But now, I find somehow

I have become the one in the house, locked away from the wind
and the rain and the sheer joy of being alive, old,

yet still the half wild girl whispers to me and I remember.

I wish I had photos of my fur babies when I was a kid but unfortunately I do not so these are stock photos of how I remember my pups. I had a difficult childhood in some aspects but there is nothing like the love of a dog to soothe the wounds of life.

We always had several dogs that would find their way to us and join our pack. They were a motley crew, each a distinct personality, mostly strays and throw-aways, each with a special place in my heart. I don’t remember most of their names but I do remember what a gift they were to a lonely girl.

Ode in a Mason Jar

Potion in a mason jar, crouched patient,
poised ready to explode, silent prophet 
of frozen time and slow forgetfulness.
Fluid crystal shadowed with bluish tint
formed and distilled into being in some
secret green leaf tinged hollow protected by 
bewhiskered men with shotguns cradled close,
clad in overalls. What wickedness or 
goodness prescribed? What mad pursuit? What great 
struggle to escape? What forbidden ecstasy?

Ah, happy, happy boughs! That hide the still 
and keep the revenuers blind and lost 
in the shades and shadows of the green hills. 
Witch man! beneath the trees, you cannot leave 
your post until the mason jars are filled. 
Distiller! never, never can you partake 
before the deed is done. Mad sorcerer, 
forever brewing bliss surrounded by 
copper tubing and metal tubs. Hard work
helps the heart grow steady and strong. Do not 
despair bliss waits wrapped in a Mason jar. 

Who are these coming to the revelry?
To what secret spot, jester, do you lead 
these innocents clad in boots and blue jeans
impatient for a night of magic bliss?
A coon dog baying at the moon is sweet, 
but a fiddle touched by madness is more; 
Fiddler! Drink up! Taste the mystic potion 
that fogs the brain and wets the parching tongue
and cools the fiery forehead. Bewitch the
ear loud and long with spirit tinged ditties
until bodies sway and feet stomp in time.
 
What little town by river or sea shore, 
or peaceful village nestled in the dark  
is emptied of its folk come Saturday
night by the siren call of flickering 
forbidden dreams trapped in a mason jar? 
Little town, where are your proud pickup trucks
with gun racks in the dusty back windows?
Only the lightening bugs and whip-poor-wills 
are witness to your empty streets and roads 
that lie quiet under the summer stars.


Mason jar, humble attitude! with clear 
and simple form, beneath the forest sky
and down the hidden path; You wait silent 
and ready with patient piety, for the 
sweet nectar of forgetfulness: Cold Fire!
When old age bends the bones and shivers the 
hand and a rocking chair on the front porch
is all that remains of life you will bring 
solace and remind us that all will turn
to dust and beauty is truth, truth beauty.

                                                            October 2016
(Inspired by Ode on a Grecian Urn by John Keats)

https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/44477/ode-on-a-grecian-urn

I wrote this poem when I was taking a creative writing workshop at Johnson County Community college. The assignment was to write a parody of something. Parodies are supposed to be comedic or even mocking but It was not my intention here to be either although going from a high brow Grecian urn to a very down to earth mason jar full of moonshine might be funny or even mocking.

I just loved the layers of description in the original poem and tried to keep that cadence and beat and of course the ending; “beauty is truth, truth beauty.”

You can decide if it is funny or mocking to you. In any case I hope you enjoy the poem. It was fun to write; to find the words and word images that paint a very different picture from Keats original yet keep the magic of the poem.

Under a Burnt Umber Sky

A burnt umber sky drips rust
as desert winds swirl clouds of dust
and snap a shredded plastic bag
clenched in the hands of a ragged
tree skeleton imitating live,
where once true life grew green.
It used to be a sweet warm breeze
blew in from the rolling blue sea
bringing rain to bless the ground
blooms and bees and beauty all around.
But now some obscene Frankenstein
created from carelessly discarded crap
bags, balloons, buoys, bottles,
ropes, cups, straws, plates,
six pack rings, polystyrene, food wrappers
sweeps in and out with the sluggish tides
choking life on both land and sea
and leaving only a faint memory of
fish and plants and birds and bees.
The only things living here are the cockroaches.

tons of trash

What a wasteful destructive group we humans are. Every day we use something once and throw it away, mostly because it is inconvenient to wash or reuse. It is estimated that every year we throw another 8 million or so tons of plastic into the ocean. There is currently an island in the pacific twice the size of Texas that is made almost entirely of plastic. It is estimated that there is 276,000 tons of plastic floating in the sea with more either sunk or washed ashore. If we don’t figure out a way to stop this eventually plastic trash will cover the oceans from shore to shore and suffocate all life on this earth. And this is only one of the terrible acts of abuse we pile on our long suffering planet.

A million seabirds and a hundred thousand marine mammals are killed by ocean plastic every year and 700 species of marine animals are in danger of extinction due to plastic. No one is sure of the impact of humans eating seafood polluted with plastic.

According to NOAA it takes 450 years for a plastic water bottle to decompose and 10 to 20 years for a plastic bag. Some sources say it doesn’t decompose it just breaks down into micro plastics.

Links

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_debris

https://www.newsweek.com/great-pacific-garbage-patch-trash-island-pacific-ocean-857494

https://www.condorferries.co.uk/plastic-in-the-ocean-statistics#:~:text=There%20is%20now%205.25%20trillion,their%20way%20into%20our%20oceans.

https://www.healthline.com/nutrition/microplastics#what-they-are

Kingdom Light

I slog through the mud buffeted by the current
Each step a terror of falling.
I cannot breathe. I am overwhelmed.
A friend reaches for my hand and smiles
Echoes of kingdom light in her eyes.
The cold wind blows my thoughts like leaves
A perfect storm of darkness and madness.
I cannot breathe. I am overwhelmed.
Sun streaked clouds red and yellow and gray.
Promises of kingdom light in the sunset.
Groans beyond sound bleed from my body
And fade the world to red and grey.
I cannot breathe. I am overwhelmed.
His Spirit calms and comforts me.
Longing for kingdom light to heal us all.
Thy kingdom come… (Mat 6:10)


Ramona Crawford
2/26/2020