Six Works
Christmas is Coming
There I was, ready for battle, same enemy,
same season. What combination did I
anticipate as the trees lost their leaves
and the commercials cameo Frosty the Snowman
and not Elvira, Mistress of the dark?
My mother’s diabolical nature performed
like the Nutcracker every December.
Three Tears
Do you want the story of three tears?
Or the story of the woman who gave the three tears?
Daughter, mother, woman:
She ran, drank, drugged,
sexed, married, mothered, cried,
studied, taught, wrote, read, “traveled,”
moved, stayed, and loved, loved, loved.
She gave three tears.
She cried three tears.
Three tears she wept.
Three tears—
three drops of blood—
she loved.
Two pages left on a plane
What do you say
when you’ve got
two pages left
in the journal
and dread
the plane crashing?
I loved:
Finally, deeply,
and wept for my life,
tears enough for each soul
on the plane.
I cried when
I heard the Danes saved the Jews,
when my daughter pulled me
from the smoking car,
when my daughters were born,
when the youngest almost died,
when my parents smiled.
I’ve been lost, found, and I loved.
Kewpie Doll
At seven,
I found my beloved
plastic Kewpie doll
dismembered
hanging by her
shaved head—
mated, hooked
herringbone hair—
and torso,
only.
I went outside—
to find her limbs—
to avoid my brother.
My Child’s Ill
And I keep imagining her funeral.
The questions people ask,
my sorrow, tears, my inability
to speak, my life destroyed, people
trying to bring me back; we all know:
I’d just wait
by the gate
for my day.
I could never survive
my child’s death.
Five Points and Happy Thanksgiving
C: I’m telling you. We’re like the book Jen gave me about Five Points.
M: In Brooklyn? We lived in Five Points Brooklyn-- by the Brooklyn Bridge. Our great-grandfather owned a liquor store and made his money selling booze to the workers.
C: Same thing. All the Irish came through Five Points in Lower Manhattan via Ellis Island.
M: I don’t know? Is this that movie? Gangs of New York?
C: Yeah, but no. I read a book.
M: We came in through New Orleans; he came north with the army. Fought for the south.
C: Then, when he came north he came through Five Points.
M: Five Points? Manhattan?
C: Right.
M: Okay!
C: Anyways. There’s this gang-guy that has a woman named Bloody Mary.
M: A nice girl, right?
C: Yeah, no. She shaved her teeth to points and wore metal claws.
M: Nice. This is the nice part. What for?
C: To fight the other guys.
M: The other guys?
C: Other guys in other rival gangs.
*Hey mom, that’s what you looked like when they took your caps off.
M: Nice, thanks. Same name.
C: Didn’t they call you scary Mary? In high school or college?
M: Thanks.
*Nice. Scary Mary. Why? Because of her teeth?
M: Shush. No, I wore a lot of black. Back to Bloody Mary.
C: Okay. Do you have dentures?
M: No, veneers.
C: Rotten Irish teeth.
*Crack head mama.
M: I was not. Stop that.
*Nana didn’t feed her.
M: Yeah, this woman I work with said, ‘Did you get new teeth?’ I said, all embarrassed at the expense, ‘Yeah, I’ve got rotten Irish teeth.’ And she tells the group of professors, ‘Poverty and poor nutrition.’ Nice. Right here in Jersey.
C: That’s cause you ate gumdrops for breakfast.
M: That’s why kids don’t run the frickin’ world.
*Crack head.
M: What’s with you and the frickin’ crackhead thing?
C: Leave her alone; she knows you were a freak.
M: Nice. Nice. Happy frickin’ Turkey Day.
C: Freak-barefoot, ditch-dwelling freak. Hippay, Jersey Hippay. Flute smokin’ hippay.
M: Jesus. We’ve got to ruin the nice flute part. Now I’ve smoked crack in my flute?
*Crack!
C: Pot?
M: Jesus.
*Pot head.
-You smoked pot in a flute?
+And crack?
&Did you mix them?
C: Later in a pipe!
*You said they didn’t have crack back then?
C: They had crack; we just called it Meth. The bikers made it in the garage and cut it with gasoline.
M: Someone shoot me.