
Monday, May 27, 2013
Garage Sales and Flea Markets

Tuesday, May 21, 2013
I"m blogging again...
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
A day in the life of Sarah and Katie
(Two best friends upon seeing each other after a long day.)
Katie: Surprise greeting!
Sarah: Excited super cheesy greeting!!
Katie: Animated question?
Sarah: Enthusiastic answer! Energetic question?
Katie: Introverted non-committal response.
Sarah: Hurt and embarrassed dismissal.
Katie: Reengaging statement.
Sarah: Half-hearted response.
Katie: Metabolic question?
Sarah: Titillated response.
Katie: Awkward silence.
Sarah: Pregnant pause. Overly confident question?
Katie: Nervous laughter.
Sarah: Defensive dismissal laughter.
Katie: Urgent statement. Pressing question?
Sarah: Rhetorical question?
Katie: Obstinate statement.
Sarah: Accusatory putdown.
Katie: Aggressive ursine personal attack.
Sarah: Irritated question? Confused question?
Katie: Random fact.
Sarah: Purpose-driven question?
Katie: Random fact.
Sarah: Repeated purposefully driven question?
Katie: Random fact.
Sarah: Piqued response.
Katie: Mutilated baby-babble.
Sarah: Clarify question?
Katie: Magnanimous excuse.
Sarah: Obsolete explanation.
Katie: Question?
Sarah: Statement.
Katie: Surprised response. Closing statement.
Sarah: Final chortle. Statement.
(Hug and depart)
Wednesday, May 11, 2011
a girl and her dog

I’ve fallen in love with a brown-eyed girl.
At night, I trace invisible hearts
over her white and grey coat.
Her body curves into mine.
At night, I trace invisible hearts
to protect her from monsters.
Her body curves into mine as
I sing lullabies into her ear.
To protect her from monsters
I tuck her beneath my blanket.
I sing lullabies into her ear, and
she kisses my hand—thank you.
Tucked beneath my blanket,
my lips shape a prayer of sleep.
She kisses my hand, a thank you.
Whispered secrets between two sisters.
My lips pray for sleep.
My breath falls into pattern
with my sister’s—whispered secrets.
I fell in love with a brown-eyed girl.
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
Set the stage...
I run around to remove my stuff and organize my work, my mess.
I set the stage; it’s all a play, a regular rudiment.
The living room! Pillows on the couch, Bible on the table. I’m content.
I fill the soap—only half way. I use it, but I’m resourceful. This I’ll never confess.
My science partner is on his way to my apartment.
Tactfully, I place Calvin & Hobbes comics on his chair, flowers by the vent.
My shoes sorted by color, and oatmeal cookies in the oven. (15 minutes or less.)
I am the master; I set the stage, a regular rudiment.
The dishes are bubbled, the toilet paper end folded into an origami tent.
I sniff my pits, run cologne through my hair, and slap on a blue dress.
My science partner is on his way, almost to my apartment.
I quickly shave my legs in the sink, and my heart pumps for the event.
I don’t want to look like I try too hard; it’s not my only stress.
I set the stage like a dollhouse, a regular rudiment.
Go time. I sit on the couch and add my earrings, a simple accent.
He’s going to see my apartment and fall in love. That’s my guess….
My science partner is knocking on the door to my apartment.
The stage is set—just a regular rudiment.
I like his roommate.
Friday, April 29, 2011
I used to but now...
I used to be a brick wall
I used to be a tattered newspaper dated October 4, 1989, but now I am a red diary full of secrets.
I used to be a Virginia soda, but now I am a Michigan pop.
I used to be a brand new roll of toilet paper, but now I am an orange traffic cone—danger!
Pensaba in EspaƱol, Aber jetzt habe ich sprechen Deutsch.
I used to build castles out of post-it notes, but now I am an ice cream tree.
I used to be a penny, heads up, in the middle of the street, but now I am a hot dog topped with mustard and ketchup.
I used to be a hot-pink polyester jacket, but now I am a black and white tweed pea coat.
I used to be a garbage truck stuffed with trash, but now I am painted with chemical-free, waterproof, GREEN paint.
I used to be cigarette ashes sprinkled on moldy bread, but now I am hors d’oeuvres served by men in tuxedoes.
I used to be an Italian art song, but now I am a German-dramatic aria. (The fat lady who sings.)
I used to be a garden gnome stuck between a dead robin and crab grass, but now I am a fuzzy lint roller—here to catch fallen morphemes from a vocal war.
I used to be a Magic 8 ball: try again later, but now I am a deck of cards: hearts is trump.
I used to be a little white dove posed on a wedding cake, but now I am a vibrant peacock.
I used to be a dismantled stove, but now I am a willow plate.
I used to be a purple helium balloon lost in space, but now I am a couple of cheetah-print heels struttin’ down the streets of New York City.
I used to be a pair of left-handed scissors, but now I have a pencil stashed behind my ear.
I used to be a crystal chandelier, but now I am a spotlight.
I used to be the wind winding between metallic house chimes, but now I am a canon used to blast through blueberry fields. I scare away the birds.
I used to be a three-pronged fork underneath a pillow, but now I am three hairs—flushed down the toilet.
I used to be the mother of a boy, but now I am a sister to a man.
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
if men could menstruate
In short, the characteristics of the powerful, whatever they may be, are thought to be better than the characteristics of the powerless-- and logic has nothing to do with it.
What would happen, for instance, if suddenly, magically, men could menstruate and women could not?
The answer is clear-- menstruation would become an enviable, boast-worthy, masculine event:
Men would brag about how long and how much.
Boys would mark the onset of menses, the longed-for proof of manhood, with religious ritual and stag parties.
Congress would fund a National Institute of Dysmenorrhea to help stamp out monthly discomforts.
Sanitary supplies would be federally funded and free. (Of course, some men would still pay for the prestige of commercial brands such as John Wayne Tampons, Muhammad Ali's Rope-a-dope Pads, Joe Namath Jock Shields-- "For Those Light Bachelor Days," and Robert "Barretta" Blake Maxi-Pads.)
Military men, right-wing politicians, and religious fundamentalists would cite menstruation ("menstruation") as proof that only men could serve in the Army ("you have to give blood to take blood"), occupy a political office ("can women be aggressive without that stead-fast cycle governed by the planet Mars?"), be priests and ministers ("how could a woman give her blood for our sins"), or rabbis ("without the monthly loss of impurities, women remain unclean").
Male radicals, left-wing politicians, and mystics, however, would insist that women are equal, just different; and that any woman could enter their ranks if only she were willing to self-inflict a major wound every month ("you must give blood for the revolution"), recognize the preeminence of menstrual issues, or subordinate her self to all men in their Cycle of Enlightenment.
Street guys would brag ("I'm a three-pad man") or answer praise from a buddy ("Man, you're lookin' good!) by giving high fives and saying, "Yeah, man, I'm on the rag!"
TV shows would treat the subject at length. ("Happy Days": Richie and Potsie try to convince Fonzie that he is still "The Fonz," though he has missed two periods in a row." So would newspapers. (SHARK SCARE THREATENS MENSTRUATING MEN. JUDGE CITES MONTHLY STRESS IN PARDONING RAPIST.) And movies. (Newman and Redford in "Blood Brothers"!)
Men would convince women that intercourse was more pleasurable at "that time of the month." Lesbians would be said to fear blood and therefore life itself-- thought probably only because they needed a good menstruating man.
Of course, male intellectuals would offer the most moral and logical arguments. How could a woman master any discipline that demanded a sense of time, space, mathematics, or measurement, for instance, without that in-built gift for measuring the cycles of the moon and planets-- and thus for measuring anything at all? In the rarefied fields of philosophy and religion, could women compensate for missing the rhythm of the universe? Or for their lack of symbolic death-and-resurrection every month?
Liberal males in every field would try to be kind: the fact that "these people" have no gift for measuring life or connecting to the universe, the liberals would explain, should be punishment enough.
And how would women be trained to react? One can imagine traditional women agreeing to all these arguments with a staunch and smiling masochism. ("The ERA would force housewives to wound themselves ever month": Phyllis Schlafly. "Your husband's blood is as sacred as that of Jesus-- and so sexy, too!": Marabel Morgan.) Reformers and Queen Bees would try to imitate men, and PRETEND to have a monthly cycle. All feminists would explain endlessly that men, too, needed to be liberated from the false idea of Martian aggressiveness, just women needed to escape the bonds of menses-envy. Radical feminists would add that the oppression of the non-menstrual was the pattern for all other oppressions. ("Vampires were our first freedom fighter!") Cultural feminists would develop a bloodless imagery in art and literature. Socialist feminists would insist that only under capitalism would men be able to monopolize menstrual blood. ... In fact, if men could menstruate, the power justifications could probably go on forever.
If we let them.
- Gloria Steinem (1978)