Thursday, May 30, 2024

Wisteria


“The previous 3 owners of this house 

all tried getting rid of that thing,

and it always came back.”


My neighbor,

the retired, dog-walking 

patriarch-overseer of the block,

took a long drag

on his cigarette.


“Good luck.”


He and his

emaciated guinea pig  

sauntered off,

“I told you so”

preloading in their swagger. 


The knowledge that I had to

oust not only the bush

but their smugness as well

was a splint 

to my resolve. 


Despite its rich purple blossoms,

the wisteria had to go;

it wouldn’t let go

of its malicious quests 

to reach, entangle, and pull down

2 edges of the chain link fence

and to grow pods 

that gave my daughter hives. 


I resorted to adopting

almost every piece of advice

from well-meaning backyard horticulturalists:


“cut off all the branches first”

“salt the stump”

“chop it into chunks”

“tear out all the tendril roots”

“burn it”


Waiting weeks between each method

and watching it grow back repeatedly 

worried me into desperate action,

a crater eventually adorning

that corner of our backyard. 


The smugness became mine

whenever guinea pig walked by

(at least once the grass grew back). 


And then August came

when like a hydra

7 sinuous heads surfaced,

outpacing the grass,

groping for supremacy 

of their former domain. 


I guess I missed some tendrils. 


Like Hercules,

I pushed a swiftly swinging sword,

decapitating with tentative relish,

wondering if my fate would be more like

Sisyphus’ 

in future seasons. 


Sure enough,

every summer,

the wisteria asserts

it is alive,

and occupant number 5 

weighs heavily on my mind.


Sunday, March 24, 2024

The Mithouri Pyramidth

 The Mithouri Pyramidth


“I mith my thithter.”

“I know. We’ll see her soon.”

“When?”

“This weekend.”

“Where?”

“Missouri - at your Uncle Ben’s house.”

“Ith that where the pyramidth are?”


I know how I wanted to reply

to my 5-year-old

but I rethithted. 


Friday, February 23, 2024

Stale Green

This poem is in honor of a beloved geometry teacher and drivers ed instructor: Mr. Cochran. I learned too late to appreciate him as much as I should have all along. I have tried not to repeat that mistake again. Of all the lessons he taught me about proofs and parallel parking, transversals and interstates, certainly the most significant lesson I learned from him is to try to treat people as if it were their last day on earth.

The third intersection in a row

I’ve been able to 

for the rarest time

drive straight through

makes me think

“stale green,”


the foreboding unknown

Mr. Cochran warned me of,

not in geometry class,

but in the burgundy Dodge Intrepid.


As I entered the driver’s seat

John K had just vacated -

his basketball-center legs

rendering me

a toddler - 

I saw the sidelong smirk

of a man attaining

intentional satisfaction -

a deliberately planned 

and perfectly executed

shenanigan,

like the prank he proudly recounted

of turning all his friend’s screens’ brightnesses

to zero

or setting all his alarms

to 2:34

am. 


Stale green came up

past the cornfields

and the soybeans,

by the street signs

to the interstate,

the blurred forest,

and I-74 exit 132.


It settled down 

at the McDonalds

long enough for me to practice

dodging yellow pylons

and ordering through a window.


Then, the switch back:

John’s knees tucked up by the horn

in the burgundy 

clown-car sedan.


The sidelong smirk spoke.


Stale green 

again.