Helpmates
I’m the first to tell her what to do,
though each morning she pushes my button, too.
“Get out of bed,” I order her,
come back to reconnoiter her.
When she refuses to rise at once,
I sit in the corner like a dunce
and nag and nag until she’s up
to shower and dress and feed the pup.
I keep her clothing crisp and neat
with water mist and searing heat.
I’m a dangerous helper and she knows it.
Dire results if she ever blows it
and fails to heed my hiss and cough
and forgets to turn me off.
When my workday starts, I have no say.
Always ready as she greets the day,
I perk her up and fuel her drive.
She says she needs me to feel alive.
She takes me with her when she leaves.
When she kills the rest, nobody grieves.
I’m strong and flexible and black.
Cause eyes to open and lips to smack.
She holds me tightly every morning—
cussing, yelling, pleading, warning
others who get in her way
as she speeds into her waiting day.
She pushes my buttons and wheels my wheels
with clicks and groans and grinds and squeals.
I carry her inside of me
to take her where she needs to be
and wait outside until she’s done
in rain and snow and baking sun.
I wait at home in the cold and dark,
wondering when she’ll light the spark
that relieves me of my lonely plight—
chilly environs and unlit light.
I hear her footsteps across the floor,
light up as she opens my door.
She reaches in and relieves me
of can or bottle, then goes to pee
restoring me to isolation.
I don’t complain. It is my station.
She turns me on most every night
to wallow in my sickly light,
staring at dramas I provide.
Never does she go outside
to jog or run or bike or walk,
to meet the neighbors and have a talk,
to mow her grass or trim her tree—
she seems to live her life through me.
When at night she seeks her rest,
she always favors me the best.
I cushion her at end of day,
listen as she has her say
about her travails, aches and pains,
her setbacks and all her gains.
All her secrets I will keep
as she covers up and goes to sleep.
for dVerse Poets, the prompt is “I would love to know how you deal with setbacks in life. Share with us in the form of a poem, of course, are you the kind to bounce back, do you curse and rant when things go wrong or do you wallow in self pity. As always you are free to interpret the prompt in any which way.” Image by Jessica Mangano on Unsplash.

A worthy set of helpmates you have, Judy! I enjoyed this.
LikeLiked by 2 people
I bet you have the same!!!
LikeLiked by 1 person
I do!
LikeLiked by 1 person
You have a lot of helpmates Judy.
LikeLike
I do. And I’ve probably left some out.
LikeLiked by 1 person
😍😍😍
LikeLike
With such helpmates you will overcome all the obstacles.
LikeLike
No doubt. Or, attempting to….
LikeLike
What a chronicle of your day from dawn to dark!! What a delight to read. Loved the fridge and laughed out loud.
Will you do a favor for me? I think Rob may have WordPress set to accept only compatible comments … and My Blogspot comments will not “go.” Could you tell him how very much I have missed his presence and send tons of energy his way.
LikeLike
Trying to figure out who Rob is, Helen. Can you send me a link to his blog or tell me its name?
LikeLike
Rob Kistner. The guy who has been absent on dVerse for some time, battling illness. “Image & Verse”
LikeLike
The helpers we need, well told Judy.
LikeLike