Genesis

(For Dalinda)                                                       30 April 2008

 

If you do a midlife crisis right

You get to reinvent yourself.

What feels like F4 chaos at first is just

The amputation of labels,

Façade extraction,

Annihilation of preconceived notions.

 

And then, like strolling through an identity mall,

You get to shop for the new you. 

Sister, daughter, mother . . .

Those were never far away

And first to return after the tornado.

 

But then comes the fun part.

Um . . . thinker.  I’ll take one of those.

Lover.  Yes, I’ll wear that.

Writer.  Can you throw in Poet on the twofer deal?

 

I choose each one carefully.

Now that I know I really can

Create myself

I want to make certain the me I create

            Is the me I want. 

 

Bird watcher.  Rose grower.  Dog lover.

                 Nature worshipper.

       Symphony-goer.  Art appreciater.

 

         Good friend.   Penny wise. 

         Rock solid.  Laugh-a-lotter. 

                      Meditator.

                      Mediator. 

                Believer in Magic.

                        Seeker.

                        Finder.

                      Grateful.

 

I am who I want to be.

I am who I have created myself to be.

I think I shall rest with a glass of tea

and call it good. 

Hens and Chicks

I am looking out my window on a rainy afternoon.   A hen and her five chicks are pecking around under the bird feeder just 15 feet from where I now sit.

They have escaped.  They came from the yard two houses over where the neighbors I have not met (nor want to) breed fighting cocks.  They found a hole in the piecemeal fence, stepped through the tall grass and thistles, and moved their head-thrusts in the direction of freedom.

No set meal time out there.  No food source readily available.  No protection from everything the world might bring.  No fence to shelter.  No fence to restrict.

I can almost see the rooster, flaming red coxcomb wobbling with each crow as he protests their departure.  Who said chickens can’t fly?

I suddenly think of the women and children of the FLDS, and I stand up abruptly.  Must go fill the feeders.  And sprinkle a little on the ground.

On Visiting the Biltmore

62 bedrooms for a family of three.

A dining room bigger than the footprint of my house.

The view from the master’s suite alone worth every untaxed penny.

And I could live in that library.

 

I push 1-4, following the directive of the blueprint map, and learn

            the red and white chess set once belonged

to Napolean (Bonaparte, not Jones, the first chair trumpet player in

my high school whose parents had an unhealthy obsession

          with European history).

 

Two Renoirs hang in a guest bedroom.

The masterpieces in the mister’s and missus’

          (separate) rooms are commissioned family portraits —

                    Grandfather Commodore,

          Father, Mister, Missus, and Baby, of course.

 

                    Such obscene luxury.

                    Such gross indulgence.

                    Such overdone opulence.

 

          How I wish it was mine.

 

I’d close it to the public (though how would they know how

          magnificent I am without the audio tour?) 

and rehire the maids and valets and stablemen

and gardeners and coachmen and chefs. 

          Family Christmas wouldn’t be at mother’s anymore.

 

I’d treat the help fairly

and bus in orphans for Easter egg hunts and Halloween hayrides.

          The papers would print stories of my largesse,

and then plead for the exclusive photographs

          of the inside

                    of my house.

 

By 1-9 I’m pissed.

What are all these people doing in my house with 62 bedrooms

          for a family of three?

                    Me and you and Me.