Holly House
Her dreams now rot and wither,
her family all decay,
but that's what happens at Holly House,
when Molly comes to play!
She wasn't in the cellar,
and not beneath the floor.
The chimney here's been all sealed up,
So, Molly's at the door.
If you look into her face,
She'll give you one sweet kiss.
In seven days, alone you'll be,
And taste what Molly missed.
-This poem was originally published on its Facebook page. It was created as part of the premise for a novel I'll eventually write called, "Holly House." The picture is of my niece.-
Under the freeway overpass is where they live.
She knows most of them by name.
Never in a million years would she
have thought that some of the friendliest
people on earth lived five minutes from her,
under a bridge.
Despite what people say,
they are nice, gifted, and educated people.
These people have created a community of
their own because society doesn't accept them.
This particular community is known as tent city.
Society labels them as lazy, slobs, lowlifes, druggies, alcoholics, and prostitutes.
But like us,
they all have their stories.
The first member of tent city was Birdman,
he can put on quite the show.
He is a highly respected member of tent city.
The next person she met was Daniel.
She and Daniel have become really great friends.
Like her,
he loves to read books.
He's such a talented writer,
and his poetry is genius!
Then there is a guy she calls Bakersfield.
She calls him that because the
first words he ever spoke to her were
"Miss I'm stranded here from Bakersfield, could you spare some change?"
That reminded her of the song "Bakersfield,"
by Social Distortion.
Bakersfield doesn't look like your typical
member of tent city.
He looks like something straight out of a magazine.
Young, blonde hair blue eyes.
The whole package.
Just goes to show that looks aren't everything.
But boy oh boy,
can he play the guitar like a god.
The members of tent city have created
a beautiful world within this evil world the
rest of us live in.
The price of admission is to lose it all.
Only those who have nothing left to lose can experience it.
She is grateful that they have accepted her as a friend and that they have let her partake in and experience the things that go on under the bridge.
a Month of Sundays
The past is a belly full of lore and myth of violence and pain in the form of familial drama. An unbreakable pattern, many generations thick. But the day the phone rings, all of that stops quicker than garlic burns. My uncle calls to tell us that Grandma’s kidneys are failing—soon the toxins would leak into the rest of her body and poison her into death.
My mother and I stop life and race to the Bronx faster than kidneys. We set up an air mattress on Grandma’s floor that night, giggle like girls as the plastic bed squeaks each time we try to get comfortable. We didn’t know it yet, but this is where we will sleep for a month. Where we will tread water, pump our knees against the ebb and flow of death like tides. Against urine, moaning, cloudy delirium.
Grandma asks me constantly if her bathroom is in the hallway. Mistaking her new studio apartment in this senior-equipped building for the one she was a young mother in (the tenement building down the block.) Suddenly, she’s seeing Aunt Theresa in the armchair across from her (a relative of ours who died many years ago.) She’s asking for Ping (her pet ghost who lived in the radiator of her old house.) She’s hosting visits with spirits over tea (which can only mean, she’ll soon be one too.)
In the twenty four hours before she dies we all gather as she prepares to leave her own skin. She smells slightly sour but mostly powdery like an infant. We hold vigil, kneel at bedside, link hands and hum Ave Maria.
What must it be like to be alive while approaching death? Do you hear the tickticktick of a film reel as the images of your life flip by? Do you feel suddenly still, quiet, cool? Surrounded by the acoustics of a snowy night? Do you release your grip and go towards the light?
The day Grandma dies, I wake up to the nostalgic ring of a landline phone. My first couple blinks leave me disoriented when I find myself on the floor of this room I barely know. Mom let me sleep in, but it’s clear she’s been up for hours; all the lamps have moved around and a portable CD player bellows with the honey sweet sound of Jimmy Roselli’s operatic voice, round and full in Italian dialect. Grandma isn’t gone yet, though she’s drifting close, and will leave us later that night. Yesterday she changed from a person to a body in a room. Strangely though, the morning feels warm, like a fresh plate of fluffy pancakes. Usually I wake up crusty-eyed, stumble to the bathroom for a splash of water, stretch out the aches sleep leaves behind. But today, I smile, roll off the Aero Bed, lay on the carpet for a few minutes and let myself feel like it’s a holiday or a cousin’s birthday or just an old fashioned Sunday morning. And Grandma is just sleeping in too.
When Graveyards Feel Like Home
I put us in the ground before we ever had a chance
Buried you in my backyard
with all the other things that scare me
Nothing blooms where it's planted
But I can see your hands reaching up from the soil
Tree like branches trying to meet the sun desperately
Shut the door, close the blinds, go with what you know.
I never thought seeing myself so clearly
in someone else’s eyes would make me run so fast.
I was never really afraid of you
Just the girl staring back at me I saw in your eyes.