Open Poetry #42 |
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/ Carolyn's / Mommy: A Study of Loss |
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Christopher
Moderator
Member Rara Avis
since 1999-08-02
Posts 8296Purgatorial Incarceration ![]() |
/ Carolyn's / Mommy: A Study of Loss (c)2008 C.G. Ward ----- "Black is the absence of light, but white is the absence of memory, the color of can't remember." -Stephen King (Duma Key) "I'll bet it even snows in Hell... although I doubt it sticks." -Stephen King (Duma Key) ----- --prologue (Selene): there exists no solidity on the face of the moon; all textures are kind, soft, malleable. curved outward, it reaches... like the later times she would arch the tines of her back. parody of ecstasy (parody only, no truth there, oh no, only a pretense of heat. the moon, after all, is cold) the light is furtive, the night is sloped. [is cold] [is cold] - her prey stands removed. - she owns desire, or thinks she does - it is a "storybook" beginning, so who cares if sometimes he... pickup truck, an occasional smile: a bit of the bad-boy-dark-side-maybe-might-anger-lust-red-red-red-red. oh well, close enough to a shining knight for her. --genesis (Eros I - Carnal): she cries. grasping at hope is like picking snowflakes off the ground. do dreams melt as grand as ice in a muffled scream? he is a picture of solidity, their hope exempt from s o l i d a r i t y. Peace is a word prefacing Love, an act as far from the concept as needles are from straw. grunt-groan-"great" roll over and focus on Nox while she shudders and sleeps only in her mind - but never with her heart. never with her heart. even together, apart. the silence is a sham, a mockery of hand-holding that represents so much more than the reality. she is a china-doll, a glass-eyed figurine sticky-taped to the fireplace mantle so his friends can joke and jibe and jeer (when she's not around, of course) about the shape of her thighs and the jiggle of her walk. it arouses him, incites his hormones to ever greater achievements of debasement. and she thinks it is love, suffers the ministrations of an self-involved man. because, where else can she go? ... but, gracious is not her nature, and she has ways to make him pay. (after all, as we said before: the moon is cold) --delivery (Demeter): a baby is born, oh hallelujah! and, her mother dies. yeah, not so good, so joyous, or even understandable: life has its way of messing with us, - all one big joke - of convincing us that all will be well and well and well and all manner of things will be - - - - - - over. / Carolyn / a name fades on the mother's lips... lips stained with such grief (not to mention other, nastier things) that even a reaper must weep, must wonder if the job is worth it. who needs a nine-to-five when you can watch a young mother die? others, though, misunderstand, whisper the kindness that one could trade like for like life for life time for time. [tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock] --silence (.....): I will not expound here; we know this part, understand it with a depth so visceral, that no amount of evolution can dredge the riverbed of our psyches. penitent now, we must move on. --nightmares (Chronos): now, Father must man-up, bite the bullet, become... responsible? he cries - not for the loss of love, (come on, do you really believe in that crap?) but the decimation of dreams, the cessation of planning for a bright future, a golf cart in the garage, and a mid-life mistress on the side. / Carolyn / the child is a stowaway, a passenger on the cruise---liner of his life, rarely noticed, vaguely considered, 'ought more 'n a trophy... much like the wife used to be, longs to be, (we can assume) never will be again. from an invisible perch, mommy watches, the spirit of spite bound to her girl, as a golem to a spell, and just as stony. she hates that / Carolyn / has a future she herself can never regain, and hates herself for hating. yet she watches still, riding the dreams of her daughter through the night - first jumbled and juvenile, later... some could say the concept of darkness is derived from a teenage girl's dreams. her mother sits astride those dreams as well, burrowing, borrowing, barrowing. for / Carolyn's / mommy, time is measured only... --sidebar (godless / humanity): / Carolyn / is a goodly child, a quiet child, a troubled child, if anyone deigned to notice. but silence is preferred when gods disdain, and Father cannot abide the noise of a child molding tomorrows he avoided reaching. / Carolyn / is a battered child a ruined child, a child who's taken the place of a mother who didn't want to be there either... not really. at night, sometimes, she speaks to her mother, never knowing she is listening. of course, so was Father, and then - a bit more of the bad-boy-dark-side-maybe-might-anger-lust-red-red-red-red. and / Carolyn / cries herself to sleep, her mother's ethereal hand brushing the nape of her neck. but not, we think, in sympathy. --transition (Apollo): when silence becomes a balm in a child's life, we must search for the cause: chaos is the preferred ambience for a young person. but / Carolyn / oh, / Carolyn / has her dreams and her schemes and the thing that keeps her up at night, gives her a reason to paint the valleys of her eyes with a pale, flesh-hued stain of how-well-can-you-hide-the-shame. she is still quiet, still troubled, but only partially broken. perhaps, we would like to believe, her mother lends a strength she never had when she wore skin instead of ether, when she used to play the same hide-the-shame game. 16 17 18 19 sheltered? imprisoned. she yearns for another life. does not want to be her mother. sure as hell doesn't want to be Father... doesn't even want to be in the same room, the same house, state... 'perhaps,' she thinks. --escape (Eros II - Agape): how often does a child revisit the sins of their ancestors before they can live their own? we cannot know, but imagine it's an impressive number - - - / Carolyn / - - - He is nothing (everything) like Father. He is young, vital, real, and, best of all, He understands her, who she is. (oh, I think we’ve heard that one before.) He listens to her dreams - (at least, long enough to convince her to shed her inhibitions and...) she doesn't see, or really know. come on, really, how could she? - - - / Carolyn / - - - Father shrieks. Father wails. Father cries, then threatens, then crumbles; what use have the strong for the weak, when the chains that once bound have been transferred to another? --sacrifice (Persephone): yet, as we know, / Carolyn's / mommy watches still [so cold] [so cold] sees in Him the father that once held her loins to his hips, and bound her freedom to his fist. she knows, oh, she knows. 'better dead,' she slithers, from behind the veil separating the living from incoherent reasoning. Mother doesn't recognize that her backdrop is faded, her fingers are insubstantial, and her soul - frozen in selfish hatred and desire in selfish spite and pity (perhaps more for herself than / Carolyn / ?) she can only weep tears of shame and call them Love. she can only reach for the sun through a waterfall of hatred, reach, and... --epilogue (Thanatos): silence beckons all, fingertips bony as slivers of ice. we heed. in time, perhaps welcome, the cold the moon [so cold] the moon [so cold] the moon [so cold] as she once used to welcome the heat of his self-loathing. blackness envelopes her shroud: the white recedes, memory returns, and Mother wails from behind stapled eyes as Death embraces her second soul pulling outward and away from dreams of living. with invisible fingers, / Carolyn / turns from Mother's cries and, reaches through a [so cold] waterfall of hatred to touch the darkness that spawned her spited her pierced her. - - - - - - - - - - it is entropic, this journey we make. time devolves only into what we can provide those left behind - be it happiness, or fear. anger-lust-red-red-red-red it always ends red. -----/-----/-----/----- References (for Karen): Agape: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agape Apollo: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo Chronos: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronos Demeter: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demeter Entropy [entropic]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entropy Eros: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eros_%28mythology%29 Tantalus: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tantalus Nox: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nox_%28mythology%29 Selene [nee Luna, nee Artemis]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selene Thanatos: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thanatos -- Steven King - Duma Key: http://www.amazon.com/Duma-Key-Novel-Stephen-King/dp/1416552510/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1202345999&sr=8-1 |
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© Copyright 2008 C.G. Ward - All Rights Reserved | |||
Sunshine
Administrator
Member Empyrean
since 1999-06-25
Posts 63354Listening to every heart |
Oh Lordy...you wrote an Epic. I'll be back tomorrow to study... it's been a long time coming, but I'm so glad I've something to look forward to! ![]() |
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SEA![]() ![]()
Moderator
Member Seraphic
since 2000-01-18
Posts 22676with you |
I have goosebumps!! good grief Kissy....this is so intense! The way this pulls the emotions...so excellent! Not only are you cute, but you can write like none other... ![]() |
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nakdthoughts Member Laureate
since 2000-10-29
Posts 19200Between the Lines |
and... she yearns for another life so much to contemplate here...every line led me to the next. M |
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serenity blaze Member Empyrean
since 2000-02-02
Posts 27738 |
You made me break my vow of silence. (references for moi? Or another Karen?) I was good until I hit Nox. And I should known that one too. This is most especially good stuff, C. I'm ever curious about technique--um, the slashes are for...???? I'm gonna save this one. (I think I'll have to send a link to a few friends too--and I only do that occasionally.) This is the whole meal, m'friend. Complete with perfect wine, artful presentation, and yet it's simple enough to go down easy (so to speak--sorry--I'm still me ![]() Ah...roll over and sleep now. You've done your work masterfully. Wow. Is this feeling I have...could it be? SATISFACTION? ![]() ![]() |
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Sunshine
Administrator
Member Empyrean
since 1999-06-25
Posts 63354Listening to every heart |
I enjoyed the weave the storyteller/narrator [second voice] but I too am curious as to the / slashes / unless you are currying favor as to some form that I am not familiar with [and I'm not familiar with a lot, but I'm getting better ![]() As said above, this was very enjoyable, hard-hitting, life and death and we won't speak of love, more of dependency and lust and co-dependence and some spiritual ever-lasting that could be there. [I choose to think it is so.] It's so good to see you post, and if it takes months before the next one that is as great as this one is...it will be well worth it. You're publishing, right??? ![]() |
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Christopher
Moderator
Member Rara Avis
since 1999-08-02
Posts 8296Purgatorial Incarceration |
for you midi-k. ![]() |
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Robert E. Jordan Member Rara Avis
since 2008-01-25
Posts 8541Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
Christopher, Shades of John Dillinger, and the “Lady In Red”. Stop signs should really be green. This is excellent work. I enjoyed the read. Bobby |
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TomMark Member Elite
since 2007-07-27
Posts 2133LA,CA |
Enjoyed the read. Beautiful poem..the emotion and the flow, though I only got...may be half of the story. |
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Midnitesun![]()
since 2001-05-18
Posts 28647Gaia |
wow...C, this was a fascinating read! |
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serenity blaze Member Empyrean
since 2000-02-02
Posts 27738 |
"noli me tangere" mutters Karen. *weak smile*? Okay, so you dont wanna explain the slashes. (Even if I promise not to steal them like I stole this little thingie---> ~ ![]() So okay, I'll just assume the slashes are to isolate Carolyn, and thus, it gave the impact of detachment on a subconscious level for me as your reader. If that was your intent, congratulations. And C? I really, really love this poem. As I told a friend, I'm not sure if it is a great poem, or just the right poem for me at the right time. (Now, now, it can be both.) I want to add that normally, this style of poetry is not my cup of tea. But somehow, with that tone of detached observance, you hit just the right notes for me. I would love to go through it line by line, but I related to it so personally, I'm afraid I'd ruin it for everybody as I regressed into an all about me self absorbed analysis of my own experience (yet again) and somehow, this poem is like when you meet someone, and you just know that they know what you know--even at first glance. I applaud your use of ellipses here. Loss is grief and mourning and it can't be measured in increments of time. Even when we would like that. (That bit about "it will heal in time" is absurd because time slows to a crawl when pain is intense and you wait for relief. (tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock?) I couldn't help but notice that aside from the Gods and Goddesses in your "headers", / Carolyn / , "Father", and "He" "Him" are singled out for capitalization. I don't think that was one of your happy accidents either. I like it very much, and I'll try to refrain from delving into my masculine/feminine speech about being more accurately described as active/receptive principles. That said, it's enough. *smile* Nice touch, you. I loved "delivery" because it brought to mind something I realized when I had my own children. Actually, at the first flutter of quickening, I realize now that even through the awe that I felt, and still feel, that when I gave birth to my first child--the child in me had to die. And then, how unfair it is to the child, but it's inevitable that parents revive that inner child as they relive their childhood watching their own children, and clumsy attempts to heal the oh-we-thought-we-forgot traumas incurred through them. But this is dangerously close to me getting too personal again, and I've done that enough, methinks. I love that you start with the moon, the receptive principle, the reflection which can serve to guide us, and then, during the nights of the dark of the moon, we become acutely aware of our stargods. But I'm going to shut up again--I love this poem--it is fluid metaphor and my own very personal interpretation can change again over night. And that is what a poem should do. Now, back to silence? smiling, you don't mind if I quote you, do you? "I will not expound here; we know this part, understand it with a depth so visceral, that no amount of evolution can dredge the riverbed of our psyches. [the bold italics are mine good people, that there is my favorite line] penitent now, we must move on." and thank you Christopher. I love this poem. It is worth thinking about more than a few days. |
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serenity blaze Member Empyrean
since 2000-02-02
Posts 27738 |
Oh. And I wouldn't have minded at all if you'd painted that last word red. *chuckles and winks to Linda* |
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serenity blaze Member Empyrean
since 2000-02-02
Posts 27738 |
But just the last one. ![]() ![]() |
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Alison![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
since 2008-01-27
Posts 9318Lumpy oatmeal makes me crazy! |
I am coming back to read this when I am more awake - but I want it up here so I don't miss it. |
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Alison![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
since 2008-01-27
Posts 9318Lumpy oatmeal makes me crazy! |
May I print this out? I am just feeling really quiet inside and want to read this again. And, I want to save it out of the computer, if I may. Alison |
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