It was hard living
in four small rooms
with mama talking shit
and dad two arms
holding a newspaper.
My sisters and I crawled
through that one way
conversation collecting stones
for our baggage.
Dad didn’t always keep his silence.
He had expert aim with his rifle words
that could hit mama’s last nerve every time.
A volume up radio tuned
to WHB was target practice
when dad shot sniper fire from the lip,
“Rock n roll isn’t music,”
Mama would look down her gun barrel
to pull the trigger with, “Shut the hell up.”
Our family only had one family tradition,
an annual Christmas fight.
Mama hated the season of pine needles
dropping from a scrawny tree
and two weeks wrapped in lights.
Words would fly in the frosted back and forth
until dad would proclaim, “I think we all
should go our separate ways!”
Shell shocked by the expected
we girls would wipe tears
while thinking, “I wonder if Santa
will leave us a doll before
we leave for separate ways?”
Life was shouts lived behind
the sound proof glass of neighbors
too far away to hear it.
My sisters and I were too young
to know reasons, our
parents
too wounded to find healing.
As I think back I can hear, be it ever so humble….
Scratch that 45, humility might have been
in the plaster, but it didn’t live in flesh
glued to baggage a family didn't know how to unpack.
glued to baggage a family didn't know how to unpack.
©Susie Clevenger 2013
Ok, over at Real Toads Herotomost ( Corey Rowley) wanted us to write something he could feel. Real Toads ~ Friday Night Raw
I need to clarify that in the poem the reference to Mama's gun barrel was a verbal one. It wasn't until my parents passing that we found out about circumstances in their lives that contributed to their pain and tension. Most people carry baggage. There are those of us who are blessed enough to find ways to no longer carry it.
Comments
sidenote, I'm desperate to learn how to record. Can you drop me an email?
"He had expert aim with his rifle words
that could hit mama’s last nerve every time."
Perfect. We should al have the courage to write like this.
K