I wanted to post this letter from a friend who runs a tour company and just cancelled two of her tours. it is the best argument for isolation that I have seen.
I wanted to post this letter from a friend who runs a tour company and just cancelled two of her tours. it is the best argument for isolation that I have seen.
Sister One and Sister Two
Sister one and sister two, not evenly endowed.
One evaded notice while the other sister wowed.
A curvaceous body and over-ample bodice
caused the gentlemen in town to label her a goddess.
And while competing suitors stirred up quite a kerfuffle,
somehow her older sister got lost within the shuffle.
The younger married early and had children one, two, three,
while the elder went to college and got a law degree.
Now she deals with matters such as writs and laws and torts
while her sis wipes runny noses and irons hubby’s shorts.
In her Freshman year, big sis bloomed into a cutie,
but in her full maturity she turned into a beauty.
She’s done business in London, where she met the queen,
been to Italy and Sweden and places in between.
She’s weekended in Paris and sailed the Grecian coast,
and though she’s made some conquests, she’s not inclined to boast.
Her opponents in the courtroom find her erudite and smart.
First she wins her cases, and then she wins their heart.
In short, not every teenage girl may be a beauty queen,
but from high school to one’s dotage, there are chances in between!
One day she will marry, but in the interim
she’s savoring the process of finding the right “him.”
Prompt words today are shuffle, goddess, ending. Image by Corinne Kutz on Unsplash, used with permission.
Here is a note I got today from Mary from the Murdo Girl blog. She is the grandniece of Tet Sanderson, who was mentioned in the poem “Sanderson’s Store” that I published yesterday.
“This certainly brings back warm memories. I remember getting my brown bag of candy at Sanderson’s to take to the show with me on Saturday night. Aunt Tet loved all the kids and wouldn’t take her lunch break until after all the kids had stopped to buy their treats on their way back to school. I had forgotten some of the candies you mentioned. Thanks for sharing this with me. I loved it!”
Sanderson’s Store
Allowance day on Saturday dispelled the winter’s gloom
of trudging through the snow to school or sealed up in my room.
Too cold and blizzardy outside, my mother had the gall
to ban me to a play space of room and stairs and hall.
No Fox Fox Goose, no snow forts. No sliding on the ice
of sidewalks frozen over. Just games of cards and dice,
dolls and dressing up in my older sister’s clothes.
No snow boots shedding ice and sludge. No chilblains on my nose.
Oh but on certain Saturdays, with weather calming down,
armed with dough, we kids would form a caravan to town
six blocks away, ploughing the snow with boots sliding in front of us,
a column of five kids or more made snowdrifts feel the brunt of us.
Flashing our allowances, we plundered penny sweets
in the big assorted box of Tootsie Rolls and treats
like Double Bubble, Chicken Bones, Fireballs and Nik-L-Nips.
Now and Laters, Jelly Beans and chewable Wax Lips.
Tootsie Rolls and Red Hots, M&Ms and Jaw Breakers.
Malt balls, Sugar Babies, Lemon Heads and Necco Wafers.
As we counted out our pennies, Tet would add one candy more
every Saturday that we could get to Sanderson’s Store.
Prompt words today are caravan, gall, gloom and candy. (Jelly beans, M& Ms and candy heart photos thanks to Unsplash. Used with permission.)
Here is a note I got from Mary, She is the grandniece of Tet (of Sanderson’s Store.)
“This certainly brings back warm memories. I remember getting my brown bag of candy at Sanderson’s to take to the show with me on Saturday night. Aunt Tet loved all the kids and wouldn’t take her lunch break until after all the kids had stopped to buy their treats on their way back to school. I had forgotten some of the candies you mentioned. Thanks for sharing this with me. I loved it! Mary.”
Below is a photo of Tet, standing between her sister Melitha and her brother, M.E., who was a recruiter for Cornell College in Iowa and who recruited my older sister Betty Jo to go to college there. My middle sister, Patti, also went there for one year. Lots of connections in a small town.
Substitutions
An open window, an open door
from a block away or more,
may leak a song whose melody
brings forth a long-lost memory.
Its strains may bring a prompt detection
of an overlooked reflection—
that abrupt awareness of
those substitutes for human love.
A cat, a dog, a garden full
of beauty that exerts its pull—
diversions that can take the place
of a well-loved absent face.
So we fill in each empty spot
where each loved-one, alas, is not,
making do with what what’s around—
those near-distractions that we’ve found.
Prompts for today are substitute, abrupt, reflect and music.
I spent all day trying to fight off a migraine. Soon after I woke up I lost half my vision—could only seen the right side of my head by turning my head sideways. I took a couple of caffeine pills, hoping that it was the beginning of a migraine—fearing the alternative more. My vision eventually came back but a nagging little headache persisted so I took more caffeine, tried to eat around 3 but had terrible indigestion and more of a headache. Finally, I took an Extra-Strength Tylenol along with a Coke, which I knew would give me arm and/or leg cramps, but it was preferable to a full-strength migraine. Went down to the hammock with an audible book so I could close my eyes, Morrie jumped up on my lap and Diego hung his head over the side of the hammock seeking my other hand. I pulled my cowl neck over my head to avoid their stinky bodies and breaths (bath-time is in order) and finally, blessedly, fell asleep. Aroused by a phone call from a good friend, after hanging up, I was seized by a massive foot cramp, got up and stamped it out and came up to the house where the pups and kitties were glad to finally have their meal a few hours late. Not the best day in the world but it brings me to the reason for telling you my woes, other than your sympathy—that being the reason why I haven’t yet written and published my poem for the day. So, finally, at 8 in the evening, here it is.
Unwrapped Gift
You thought life had an itinerary all mapped out and planned?
You thought it was a deck of cards, all dealt out and fanned?
You’d play this card, then that one and win the game with ease?
Fate saw your plan and chuckled and brought you to your knees.
So much for jubilation, for celebration and
your misapprehension you’d been dealt a winning hand.
Humanity is just a part of Nature’s total plan.
Evolution didn’t end when she invented man.
In one hand she holds her sketch pad, in the other an eraser.
One she uses to create herself, the other to efface her.
One creation a success, another a mistake,
Our triumph’s not the only choice that she has to make.
It’s time for the whole human race to eat its humble pie
and align itself with nature, or make the choice to die.
Nature’s not here to conquer. It’s here to show the way.
The truth of that’s the gift that we must learn this Christmas Day.
Prompt words today are humanity, itinerary, celebrate and jubilation.