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Monday, April 27, 2020

November 7, 1970

Okay, this is the first installment. I still don't know if this is going to be a short story or the start of something bigger, but it's the start of something.

 ***

Suzanne stares out the dirty window of the decrepit Detroit city bus, watching the slum roll by. When she'd boarded the bus with her best friend Mari, they'd been excited and talkative, but the tedious stop-and-go traffic and the cloud of marijuana smoke hovering over everyone's heads has put them half-asleep. Suzanne jerks awake when the bus driver slams on the brakes, and throws out her hands to save herself from a face-plant on the seatback in front of her.

"Hey man, what the fuck!" yells the guy in the Uncle Sam top hat across the aisle, but the driver pays no more attention to the grumbling crowd than he pays to the cloud of smoke. "I think I'm getting a contact high," says Mari. "It's the only kind I can afford."

Suzanne laughs. "Tell me about it. Smokin' other people's, and now, secondhand at that."

"How you feeling, Suzanne? You getting stoned?"

"Could be. I feel pretty good."

The light turns green. The bus heaves and shudders, and Suzanne lets go of the dented metal bar above the ripped seatback in front of her and settles back. The bus resumes its hissing down the wet asphalt, and she stares out the window again, looking down at the slush-spackled cars and at the gray lid of the sky above, threatening more November snow.

Suzanne and Mari are on their way downriver, heading for the Ambassador Bridge. There's another Student Mobilization rally against the war, and Canadian students from Windsor are going to meet American students from Detroit in the middle of the bridge and -- what? Shake hands, wave "U.S. out of Vietnam" posters, dance? Suzanne doesn't know the plan, or even if there is a plan, but she and Mari are willing to be a part of the newspapers' crowd estimate, their body count. Plan, no plan, plenty of kids always show up to the protests anyway. Suzanne figures if boys are getting their balls blown off in the tunnels of Cu Chi, the least she can do is go to a rally and chant. The draft is scooping up eighteen-year-old boys, and Suzanne, at sixteen, wants to make sure there will be plenty of intact boys left for her to date. She read the phrase "enlightened self-interest" someplace, and she's putting the concept into action.

The bus rolls down Jefferson, past the waterworks, past the Belle Isle entrance, past the downtown office buildings and Cobo Hall. There's a fair amount of traffic for a Saturday on the riverfront. They rumble under the freeway, past the Tunnel to Canada signs. A black bus slowly creeps next to Suzanne's window, every head in every window wearing an incongruous baby blue helmet. The city bus riders grow quiet.

Mari leans toward Suzanne. "Riot cops," whispers Mari.

"They look so weird," murmurs Suzanne. "They look like a carton of robins' eggs."

Mari grins. "You are most definitely stoned."

Their bus groans to a stop and the doors pop open. The skunk weed cloud inside meets the Zug Island factory stink outside as everyone shuffles off the bus. Mari precedes Suzanne down the stairs. "Oh, damn!" she yells as her foot sinks ankle-deep into the gutter. "Watch out for the slush!"

They're heading toward the bridge, heading toward the crush of high school students, Black Panthers, White Panthers, Wayne State University students and professors, union organizers, welfare rights organizers, Vietnam Veterans Against the War, undercover FBI agents, radical priests and nuns, dopers, mental patients, and the riot cops guarding the bridge from all of them.

The wind has picked up, blowing out of Canada, and Suzanne shivers. She's wearing the only jacket she owns, a black crinkled-fake-leather short jacket that looks totally cool -- but between the outer crinkly shell and ripped inner lining lies a thin layer of dryer lint. That's what it looks like, and that's what it feels like, Suzanne thinks, and wishes she had doubled up on sweaters underneath. Or maybe hit the Salvation Army store the previous week while she still had enough money from her after-school job to buy a used winter coat. Of course, that would have left her short on food money, which was why she hadn't done it. She sighs and walks a little faster. The crowd is in sight, and the more people, the more heat.

"Wait up!" Mari had fallen behind. Suzanne halts and turns, a little embarassed.

"Sorry!" She was thoughtless sometimes. Or just lost in thought most of the time. Another bad habit to work on.


Tuesday, April 21, 2020

Cassie: The People I Come From

By Liz Zuercher



I wanted to tell you about the people I come from – about where I grew up and what I ran away from at eighteen.
I’m sorry, I guess I should introduce myself first.  My name is Cassandra Marie Petersen, Cassie for short.  I’m forty-five years old and single.  I live by myself in a two year old condo.  No husband, no children.  Not even a boyfriend, for Pete’s sake.  Just me and my mortgage, which about now is pretty suffocating.  When I bought the place, I was raking in the dough.  But now that the real estate market is in the dumper, so’s my income. 
Oh, did I tell you I sell new homes for a living?  Living.  Is that what this is?  I go from the condo to the sales office to the condo to the sales office to the – well, you get the picture. Fun, huh?  It’s getting a little old, and I’m beginning to wonder how I ended up in this situation. What’s more, I wonder if I’m stuck in this rut for the rest of my life.  Sometimes it feels that way.  I only have myself to depend on, after all.  I have so many responsibilities.  I can’t just quit, can’t just chuck it all and try something new.  Can I?  
Lately, I’ve been mulling over the decisions I’ve made along the way, trying to see where I went wrong, what I could have done differently.  There must be some point at which I could have chosen a different path and ended up in a happier spot.  All the what-ifs and if-onlys of life are what I’m searching through.  I figure if I could pinpoint where I made the wrong choices, I could change course now. But it doesn’t work that way, does it? You’re faced with a crossroads and you select a road to travel.  Even if you don’t end up liking where that road takes you, you can’t go back to the original crossroads.  There’s too much overgrowth on the path by the time you try to go back.  You have to either accept where you are or find a way to change it going forward.
Here’s the problem.  I’ve gotten what I always said I wanted.  I’m on my own.  I’m responsible for myself and no one else.  I make my own decisions and earn my own keep.  “Better to be lonesome than sorry,” Grandma Elsa always used to say.  But she never said anything about how to avoid being lonesome AND sorry.  That’s where I am right now.  What do I do about that, Grandma?
Did I say that out loud?  Sometimes I talk to Grandma Elsa when I’m trying to figure things out.  I talk, but she never answers me.  I don’t believe in ghosts or spirits or things that go bump in the night, so I don’t really expect Grandma’s voice to come out of the blue. But it would be nice if she could give me a hint, a little nudge.  She’d be telling me to believe in myself, and I do.  At least I used to.  Oh, for Pete’s sake, this is getting so depressing.  See what I do to myself?  Snap out of it Cassie!  Sometimes I think I’ll end up an alcoholic like my parents, but I’m stronger than that I tell myself.  I can do this by myself.  I can. But do I want to?  I used to think so, but lately everything I used to think I wanted looks thin and gaunt.
         So, back to my people, the ones I come from.  I’ve been thinking about them a lot lately and what I might have inherited from them, how they may have influenced the path I took and the choices I made.  Not my parents – they’re lost causes, cautionary tales.  I hope I’m not like them.  I’ve been thinking more about my grandmothers, how different they were and how I’ve taken something from each of them, whether I wanted to or not.

Grandma Elsa
         Just like her neighbors and friends, Gertie, Fanny and Ida, my Grandma Elsa Winchester swept her big front porch every morning at eight o’clock, no matter what. She told me it was good to start the day out in a clean space, that when you went out your front door, you should feel like your house was in order.  Of course, she kept up the inside, too, but it was the house’s face to the world she was most concerned about.  In a small farm town like Colfax, Illinois, people put a lot of stock in what they can see with their own two eyes. 
Grandma Elsa wasn’t what I ran from.  If she’d still been alive when I was a teenager, I might still be in Colfax, married to a farmer and mother to a passel of kids.  No, come to think of it, I probably wouldn’t have stayed even then, but I might have stayed longer, if I could have sought refuge in Grandma’s warm tidy house.  I might have gone on to the University of Illinois, before I struck out on my own. I might have done a lot of things, if my father hadn’t been a mean drunk and my mother a simpering one.
If the people of Colfax had been paying attention to my family, they would have seen the turmoil inside my childhood home.  Maybe they knew what went on behind that farmhouse door, but if they did, they only talked about it in whispers.  They never intervened.  Of course, country people are hesitant to step into other people’s business.  It’s not seemly to interfere, go where you’re not wanted.  We were all taught that.  But we were also taught to be good neighbors.  I guess sometimes the line between being a good neighbor and interfering is a pretty fine one, especially if no one asks for help. 
 Grandma Elsa taught her daughter, Grace, my mother, the merits of good housekeeping and the pleasures of a joyful home, but she couldn’t teach her how to deal with a man who abused her.  Mom didn’t have the fortitude to stand up to such a man, or the confidence to turn her back on him when she should have.  Instead, she tried to appease him. She worked to make a home he’d want to come back to at night with a good hot meal that he’d look forward to eating at the end of a day in the fields.  It was never enough for him, though, and it nearly killed her more than once.  Little by little, her spirit was extinguished, until she could no longer hold herself together without her rum-spiked coke and cigarettes.  Grandma Elsa couldn’t help her only daughter find her way.
But for my sister and me Grandma Elsa was a safe haven.  She was round and soft and no sharp angles.  She was warmth and fun and caring.  She was everything I didn’t get at home, everything I craved from my mother.  I could never figure out how my mother missed out on those qualities as she grew up in Grandma Elsa’s house.  Maybe she had them once.  Maybe life’s twists and turns took them away from her, or buried them deep.
What did I inherit from Grandma Elsa?  I used to think I was warm, fun and caring, too.  I don’t know anymore.  There was an ease about her.  She had a way with people and a pithy saying to cover every situation.  She made people smile.  I can do that with my customers – put them at ease, make them feel at home.  But I’m not so sure that’s the real me.  It’s becoming harder and harder to put on that smile with strangers and welcome them. I have to dig deeper to find my inner Elsa.  Is she still there?  Or am I more like Grandmother Petersen?

Grandmother Petersen
Vera Baldwin Petersen wouldn’t let her grandchildren call her Grandma Vera or Grammie or Nana or any other endearing grandmother nickname.  She insisted on being Grandmother Petersen or just Grandmother. She had all the sharp, hard angles Grandma Elsa lacked. Behind her back my sister and I called her The Witch. But from today’s vantage point, I have to admit she was a force of nature. She was steel and ice, grit and determination.  She knew what she wanted and she went after it.  And what she wanted was the respectability of being a Petersen.  
The Petersens, my father’s grandparents, immigrated to the United States from Sweden in the late eighteen hundreds and being farmers, they found their way to the flat rich soil of Central Illinois, where others had come before them.  Many Scandinavians ended up in Minnesota, but my father’s people stopped in Illinois where they established their homestead.  They worked the land and had five sons, bringing them all up to be farmers, too.  Little by little they bought more land when it became available, until they had several farms across the county, on which they installed their sons when they married. The Petersen empire some of the locals called it.  Their plan worked well until Vera Baldwin came along and stole the heart of Johannes Petersen.
Vera Baldwin’s family lived in town, the wrong part of town.  She possessed a strong will and a deep desire to rise above her heritage, a heritage that included the most infamous of Colfax citizens, Old Man Baldwin, who had cold-heartedly murdered three people, including a thirteen year old girl he’d been accused of molesting.  Old Man Baldwin was only a second cousin to Vera’s father, but the connection clung to her nonetheless.  People in town had a habit of curling their lips just the slightest amount when the name Baldwin was mentioned.  Memories run deep in a small town.
Even as a child Vera plotted her escape from Colfax, but in those days escape was difficult for a girl.  The second best thing to leaving town on her own would have been to marry someone who’d move her away from there.  That didn’t happen either.  Strangers didn’t come to Colfax and hardly anyone left town.  It was a farm community. People stayed put.  They worked the land and passed it along to the next generation.  Opportunity to meet someone who’d take her away from there was next to nonexistent. So she settled on the third option – find someone very respectable to marry and assume his mantle of respectability. No family in the county was more respected than the Petersens, so Vera set her sights on a Petersen.  
Johannes wasn’t her first choice.  She liked the looks of his brother Henrik better, but Gloria Wissmiller scooped up Henrik Petersen and the others were either too young or too old and already married.  Johannes it would be and Vera planned her campaign for his heart.  She flirted.  She played hard to get.  She batted her eyelashes and made sure she was always walking where he was walking. She dressed in colors that made her look her prettiest.  To be honest, she was not a beauty, but there was a spirit about her, a spark, that appealed to the boys.  And there was a little bit of danger to her, not the least of which was the family history, a murderer in the closet so to speak.  Though Vera wanted to leave that association behind her, she knew enough to embrace it when she needed to.  She knew how to scheme and she was an expert at pulling the wool over the eyes of her prey. 
Long story short, she managed to reel in Johannes Petersen, who had his own issues and was itching to find a way out of his parents’ house and onto his own spread. The only way his folks let a son move out was if they got married and needed a place of their own.  So the inevitable followed, and in spite of the fact that Johannes’ mother had grave misgivings about the suitability of Vera Baldwin for her son, Johannes and Vera married as soon as he finished high school. He was a year ahead of Vera, so she dropped out of school to become his wife, keep his house and bear his children. They had a modest white house on a one hundred sixty acre plot of land across the road from his family home.
But Vera wasn’t satisfied.  She did enjoy some of the respectability she’d craved, but because she lived out in the country and didn’t get to town that often, it was difficult to show off her new status to those who had disrespected her.  Church was what she settled on to elevate her status further. She joined the Missionary Society of the Lutheran Church, and sang in the choir, planned church socials and taught Sunday school.  She wasn’t sure she believed in all the gobbledygook the minister said, but she was good at putting on the proper expression, and slowly her reputation as a pious woman grew.  She began to believe it herself – she was a pious woman, but it wasn’t necessarily God she was pious about.  She was her own altar.  She was what she worshipped most.  
After a while she settled into being Mrs. Johannes Petersen or Vera Petersen, instead of Vera Baldwin or even Vera Baldwin Petersen.  She was on her way to the respectability she’d always sought. Only one thing was missing – a grand house in town that would show everyone what her position in the community was.  She started in on Johannes when the children were still in grade school.  It took her until my father, her middle child, was about to get married before Johannes finally agreed to build the house in town.    
By the time I knew my Grandmother Petersen she had hardened considerably and was ensconced in her trophy house in town – the brick house that Johannes built for her, the one that didn’t belong on the street of modest white clapboard homes. There were two garages, an expansive front porch, a screened in summer house and a grand central staircase in the foyer with a crystal chandelier ordered from Sweden.  She was on top of the social heap in Colfax, if there was a social heap.  She was a trendsetter, if there were trends set in Colfax.  People looked to see what Vera Petersen was wearing and what kind of plants she put in her flowerbeds.  Then they followed suit, if they could afford to do so.  Most folks, though, could only look on in envy.  Or disdain.  
Yes, Vera had certainly achieved her goal.  By that time no one in town even remembered Vera was a Baldwin.  For that matter, the whole sordid history of the Baldwins had faded into the back reaches of ancient minds.  Except for Millie Baldwin’s house, the one where her uncle the murderer had lived when he committed the crime and that Millie inherited, living there as a spinster.  People gave the house a wide berth, but mostly because Millie was a little spooky, not because anyone remembered the story of Old Man Baldwin.  Kids called it the haunted house, because Millie let it fall into disrepair and could be seen occasionally peering out from behind tattered lace curtains.  As for Vera, she was careful to distance herself from Millie and her house.  She’d worked too hard to establish herself to purposely remind anyone of her Baldwin blood.   
To many in Colfax Vera’s efforts to be on the cutting edge, to be a leader in the community, fell flat, though.  They thought she was a little uppity, too big for her britches, and if they smiled and nodded their heads in seeming respect when she passed on Main Street, behind her back they were clucking that she was stuck up and heartless.  
I was in their camp.  Never hers. What I never could understand was why God would take a lovely woman like Grandma Elsa before a hard-hearted ice queen like Grandmother Petersen. She scared me when I was little, and even if she were a shriveled old woman of one hundred and I was still living there, she’d scare me today.  At the very least she’d make me shiver a little bit.  I don’t know if she’s still alive.  I haven’t stayed in touch with my family.  I don’t know if any of them is still alive.  It’s easier that way.  Less painful. 
In some respects knowing Grandmother Petersen explained why my father had turned to alcohol.  Maybe my mother, too, though I blame my father for that.  Neither one of them could ever do anything to suit Grandmother Petersen, and she insinuated herself into every aspect of our lives. She had lots of rules, so many I could never remember them, and sometimes I thought she made them up to fit the situation, to throw us off balance.  She was very good at that.  I never felt a sense of equilibrium around her.  Neither did my mother.  Neither did my father, come to think of it.  He was powerless before her and always backed down.  
I never tried to understand my father.  It didn’t seem worth the effort then.  Now that I’m older and have some distance from the whole situation, I think he was probably a tortured soul who could never live up to his mother’s expectations.  Maybe he reminded her too much of the Baldwin side of the family, the part she had worked so hard to bury.  The Baldwins were drinkers.  The Petersens weren’t.  The Baldwins didn’t amount to much.  The Petersens were supposed to be solid citizens.  
Karl Petersen was definitely more of a Baldwin, and that meant Grandmother had no use for him.  It meant she also had no use for his wife and children.  That was fine with me.  I had no use for her either.

The older I get and the more distance I have from Colfax and my family there, the more I see what the people I came from have passed on to me.  I always swore I was nothing like Grandmother Petersen. I was way more Grandma Elsa.  But I see now that was wishful thinking.  Yes, I can be warm and caring and fun like Grandma Elsa, but I also have Grandmother Petersen’s drive, her determination and singularity of purpose.   She longed to better herself.  She longed to get out of that town, and when that didn’t seem possible, she found a way to shed her past, her heritage, and make a new life for herself.  Isn’t that what I did?  I hated my situation, so I ran from it.  I put it behind me and created a new life for myself.  What I wonder now is whether, like Grandmother Petersen, the effort has hardened me the way it did her.  I hope not.  Help me, Grandma Elsa. 

Sunday, April 12, 2020

Lost by Nancy Grossman-Samuel


“How about if I return the stuff to Walgreens and pick you up after your manicure?"
"Sure. That sounds great. Good idea.”
“Okay. See you later,” you say walking out of the nail salon.
You saunter down the street looking at the shops along the way. A woman is leaning into a car saying “Here, this is a sample.” You look over to see a pretty middle aged woman handing half a cupcake that looks an awful lot like the old Hostess Cupcakes with the white swirls down the middle to a middle aged man who is waiting in the car. You are taken aback expecting the cupcake to be handed to a kid. Ah you think, adults are allowed to eat cupcakes. I would like a cupcake. Maybe, if I hadn’t been pigging out so much during the last few days, I would let myself have one! But a cupcake from a cupcake shop shouldn’t look like a Hostess Cupcake that I could buy at a gas station!
You walk on, looking at the shops. Quaint, pretty, your friend had called the shops here a little che che which probably meant expensive. There was a tea shop that looked cute, and you think that maybe after your sister’s nails are done you could go there and have a cup of tea together, but upon further inspection, you notice the closed sign. Too bad, you think because it would have been a nice thing to do after a manicure and returning obsolete items, things that might have wound up in your suitcase and then in a pile on your kitchen counter until you either gave them away, returned them, or just stuffed them into a drawer.
The day was warm and humid but not unpleasant. You are proud of yourself for coming up with the idea of returning the art supplies. You purchased them thinking that they could be used to decorate the picture board you were making for your great uncle’s memorial service. But as it turned out, your sisters decided that the pictures were enough, and that extra decorating would be unnecessary, even a little ‘ungapatchka,’ her great grandmothers Yiddish word describing something that is ridiculously over decorated or excessively ornamented.
You get to the corner of the street where the green Starbucks mermaid shouts loudly her presence, and whose tables are crammed with people drinking coffee and tea, talking, and working on computers. You turn left remembering that you haven’t had a non fat vente latte in weeks. You remind yourself that you feel better when you don’t drink coffee, and that you’ve saved many dollars by not purchasing them nearly daily during the last month. You really want one, and the idea of the warm cup in your hand, and the smell of coffee that never tastes quite as good as its smell promises, entices you. You take a deep breath. You are on a mission. You are returning unwanted items. You are being responsible. You stand there for a moment. You look left and see a hill that looks somewhat familiar, then you look right and think Is that the street we drove down to get here? I think so… You talk slowly to yourself out loud as if you are trying to untangle a ball of memories that won’t quite come apart the way they should. You look from left to right, behind you and ahead of you, but you just are not sure. You turn up toward the hill, and your eyes dart from side to side, up and down, you look behind you. You do not see the car anywhere, but it is a rental, so perhaps you are mistaken as to the shape or make. You think to yourself, that’s ridiculous. I’ve been driving that car for two days. I’ve been parking it and finding it all that time. It’s a black Volkswagen Jetta, with New York plates. There is no vehicle fitting that description anywhere in site. You decide to walk to the end of the block but your heart begins to race and you are feeling slightly light headed.  You do not spot your car. You stand there; still; confused; your hands on your cheeks in a silent Munch-like “Scream.”
You put your hands down, close your eyes and force yourself to breath slowly and evenly. You open your eyes and see some people who just passed you on the other side of the street, and who are looking at you as if they are not sure if they should ask if you’re okay. You smile at them reassuringly, and then look around at the banner for a Memorial Day event hanging across the street behind you. You grab your cell phone from your pocket and look at it as if it will give you the answer you want. You squeeze it tighter and tighter. Your breathing is ragged again, and you try to slow your rapid breathing and heart-rate by saying to yourself  I can call my sister if I really can’t find my way back to the car. I’m not really lost. The nail salon is that way. I can walk back. Oh God, oh God, oh God. How much of my brain has dissolved? Oh God, I’m going to forget everything. What’s wrong with me? Why can’t I remember where I parked the fucking car?
You are angry and scared and frustrated. You have been worrying about your memory for months, maybe years. It’s taken up a lot of your thinking whenever you forget the smallest thing. It’s like a demon that has come to haunt you, and you just can’t stand it. Not now, not here. Your sisters are here. You don’t want to be a burden. You don’t want to seem confused to anyone. You don’t want to be confused.
You again look around. You can feel your feet sweating in your sneakers. You are trying not to seem like a lost five year old, but you know you want cry. You want to wail out loud I’m LOST!!! Somebody please help me!!!! But you know that is irrational. You feel good knowing that you should not do that. You know that will not help. You have not totally lost control of your senses. You bite the left side of your lip and then your nails. You grab the phone tighter and walk a little further. You panic and think All I need to do is get back to the nail salon. I need to go now while I can remember where I came from.
You seem to walk out of your fog and remember that you are in Englewood, New Jersey. It is daytime. You have your cell phone. Your sister has her cell phone. Her phone number, which you do not have memorized, is in your phone. You can have her get you. You can sit at Starbucks and have the latte.
No. The fog, it seems, has really lifted and you decide that you will go back to the salon. You are a little calmer. You can make light of it. You can tell your sister that you don’t remember where you parked. You can make a joke of it. You walk faster, and faster. You just want to make sure you can get where you are going. You are sure you’re going in the right direction. You see familiar store fronts, the Starbucks, the cupcake shop, the tea shop. They are familiar. You are fine. You see the nail salon. You look in. Your sister is sitting there laughing with the manicurist. You walk in, and she looks up at you, surprised. You lean over and say in as light hearted a manner as you can. Oh boy, I cannot, for the life of me remember where we parked!
“Did you make a left at the Starbucks?”
“yeah.”
“Did you make a left at the end of that street?”
               “Right! No."
You slap your hand on your forehead as if to say I could have had a V8!
"I didn’t see the car, so I just came back. I figured you’d remember.”
She laughs and says, “Of course you don’t remember. You were on the phone talking to your friends. You weren’t paying any attention at all. You were just following my directions! Do you think that will get you to stop talking on the phone when we’re driving?!"
"No," you laugh.
She shakes her head and smiles. You walk out. Of course you think. I wasn’t paying attention. I’m fine. You walk quickly past the Starbucks making the left. You look behind and the sign is there over the street. You keep walking in the direction you first went, but you go further. You are more confident now and you get to the corner, aware that you are holding your breath slightly. You look down the street, and the car is there. You cross the street, and go to the passenger door. The meter has expired, but you lucked out. No ticket.
You get into the car and drive to Walgreens. You easily remember how to get there. You’re surprised. Perhaps you were being a little dramatic. Perhaps your brain is intact and not melting after all. You smile, and listen to an oldies New York radio station. You sing along with the Credence Clearwater Revival band. You haven’t heard this song for years, many years, and yet you remember every lyric. You get to the store, almost unaware of how you got there even though you went only once, and you easily and effortlessly return the items. The salesperson is kind and asks no questions. All is well. He doesn’t want to put the money back on your credit card because it takes a lot longer, so he asks if you will take cash. You tell him you will.
You both laugh about nothing in particular, but it’s a nice exchange.
Your phone rings. It's your sister. She is done. You tell her you’ll be there in just a few minutes, and that she should look out for you near the Starbucks. You get there easily. No problem. Very easily. You drive back to the hotel, and your sister tells you she thinks you’re going the wrong direction. You are sure that you are right, and this makes you feel even better. You are right. She’s surprised, but you are not. You knew this. You start to wonder why you give yourself such a hard time and why you move straight into panic when things seem a little off.
You decide that next time, if there is a next time, you will pretend to be Alice, on an adventure in Wonderland. You will be kinder to yourself. You will know that you are fine, and that these lapses of memory are just little tests to see how kind you can be to yourself, and how easily you can focus on the good things in life rather than the problems. It’s what you want for yourself. You’re just not always good at it. This will be a test of your own personal emergency broadcast system. All will be well. All is well. You know that.

Monday, April 6, 2020

Penelope's Turn by Susan Matthewson


This poem takes a different look at Penelope, wife of Odysseus, who is famous in The Odyssey as a symbol of marital fidelity, patience, and intelligence. Her husband Odysseus is away from Penelope and their son, Telemachus, for twenty long years during which time she waits faithfully for his return. Odysseus has spent ten years fighting the Trojan War and begins the trip home at the end of the war only to spend another ten years struggling to get home as he is besieged by misfortune and accidents along with interference by various Gods that he has aggravated for one reason or another.

Meantime, Penelope is besieged at home by a host of demanding and aggravating suitors who believing Odysseus is dead compete for Penelope’s hand in marriage to win the throne of Ithaca and deny it to Telemachus, Odysseus’ son and rightful heir. Telemachus is just a boy when Odysseus leaves and Penelope must protect him along with his birthright while also holding off the clamoring suitors who laze around her house, harass the family, eat her food, and drink her wine. She manages to fool the suitors by telling them she cannot decide on who she will marry until she finishes weaving a death shroud for Odysseus’ father. To hold them off, she slyly weaves the shroud during the day and then unravels it partly every night so she can start anew the next day.

While Penelope may well represent patience, marital fidelity, and intelligence, my poem also sees a feistier side to her. I imagine her thoughts as she wove that shroud each day, thoughts that perhaps tended toward a little more vengeance and a little less patience, both for the pesky suitors and that hussy Helen who started the Trojan War.

Penelope’s Turn

This is no world for a woman.
It is a woman who has sent our men to war
And left us to weep without our warriors.
I thank the Gods who gave me a son, not a daughter.

I curse you, Helen,
Wife of Menelaus,
You two-timing seductress,
Who took off with Paris,
Priam’s weaker son.

I dream of digging out your eyes,
You wandering witch,
Trembling now inside the towers of Troy
While my husband and so many others
Besiege the battlements to revenge your betrayal.

Ten years now, this war drags on
While I am left in Ithaca,
Lonely and embattled,
Assailed by hordes of suitors
Seeking to seize my lands,
Take the title that belongs to Odysseus
While I struggle to protect Telemachus, his son,
From their murderous rage and ambition.

They eat my food, drink my wine, waste my wealth,
And I, as a woman, defender of tradition and family,
Must treat them as guests, bear their beastliness.
Instead, I crave the power to take up sword and shield,
Show strength like Achilles,
Slice once across each neck,
Watch each head drop sightless at my feet.

These words are not befitting a woman,
But I am tired of weeping and wailing,
Tired of weaving that infernal shroud,
Tired of waiting and waiting and waiting.
Tonight, while they sleep drunk on my wine
I will take my bloody turn.