The picture above is from Cambridge (Central Square?), not Eugene, OR, but I thought that it would fit Joan Dobbie's first piece.
It's good to be back. After a tough semester, I am starting The Song Is... up again with some pieces on not driving by Joan Dobbie and Elizabeth Bruce. The fall/winter/spring contests continue!
DREAM FLYING
Joan Dobbie
I used to fly in my dreams. That's how I knew I was dreaming. If I wasn't quite sure, I'd flap my wings (arms) and lift off. Mostly I didn't fly too awfully high, but sometimes I did. I flew up to the tops of the trees. Sometimes really tall trees, almost as high as the clouds.
In 2013, in my regular life, I realized that my periferal vision was bad, not good enough anyhow. I decided to stop driving.
From then on to now, I bike and I bus.
Biking is still sort of magic for me, gliding up over the earth. I feel like I'm flying. I could well be dreaming.
The other night, as often, I wasn't quite sure if I was or I wasn't. I jumped high as I could, flapping my arms, and, THUD, landed flat on my feet. "OMIGOD," I thought, "I'm really awake!" That's what I thought. And then I woke up.
My interpretation: Now that I fly in my everyday life, my brain doesn't quite know how to handle it. "Must be she can't when she's sleeping," it thinks.
My advice: If you want to fly high in your everyday life, get rid of your car. Trade it in for a bike.
copyright 2016, Joan Dobbie
What it is to be moral
(With Thanks to Nicole Taylor whose bus conversation poems inspired me to listen)
The young lady clearly had an extra chromosome
and all the sweetness that often goes with that
Beside her, an almost handsome young
guy, his speech only slightly impaired
They knew each other well, probably from school.
(The bus pulled to a stop and another couple boarded, she holding a bundled blue blanket to her breast, he, folding up the stroller, tucking it under their seat)
"I wish I had a baby,"
the words were spoken softly, but clearly.
He reached over, tenderly touching
her cheek with the back of his hand
"I could give you one," he said
and she froze. "Don't you touch me! Ever!"
He drew back."You are engaged to
be married. Daniella is my very best
friend. Don't you ever touch me again."
"I'm sorry," he said, again,
again,
again..
as if there were no other words
in all the world.
"Daniela would be jealous," she repeated,
tears rimming her small hooded eyes.
"I'm sorry," he said, turning away, she looking
down at the floor, me
out the window
Copyright Joan Dobbie 10/16
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Elizabeth Bruce sent me one of her "one dollar" stories, which I am posting below.
Originally Published in
Firewords Quarterly (Issue 6)
in the United Kingdom in 2016
“One dollar! Woo hoo!” She shouted up the basement steps. “Honey, I
found an extra dollar in your jeans’ pocket. Another dollar, darlin’, for the
kitty. That’s good news, isn’t it?”
“Oh
my, and look at this,” she added, pulling a handful of coins out of another
pair of jeans, covered in dust from the quarry. “Another 75-cents in your other
pants. Why this is a happy day! Seaside vacation here we come!” She slipped the
dollar bill and coins into the pocket of her apron and turned back to the
washing machine.
She held the rumbled dungarees in both
hands and looked up the stairway past the bare light bulb hanging down and
waited though no reply came, only the garbled drone of Monday night football
playing on the TV in the living room.
She turned back to the laundry and after
a moment footsteps clunked across the kitchen floor above. The refrigerator door
opened and closed quickly, and the cushing sound of a beer can opening wafted
down the stairs.
She stopped and listened to the rattle
of his key chain clipped onto his belt loop.
“Baby,” she called quickly, the quiver
in her voice swaddled in the sweetness she’d been known for, the sing songy
uplift he’d once adored. “Want me to make you some nachos, darlin’?”
“I got some of that new picante sauce
you like so much. Why, folks say it makes homemade nachos just as good as the
ones at Los Lobos.”
She twisted the ruffle of the apron she
wore constantly these days it seemed, stretched tighter now across her midriff
softer and wider as it was like the other wives, the ones with babies in tow
though no baby tugged at her bosom after all, cranky for want of mother’s milk.
She’d have been the one to do it too, nurse her baby the old fashioned way,
like their grandmas and great-grannies had done, low-class and nasty though the
girls today said it was, and swore they’d rather die than sink so low. Never
you mind, she’d told the other gals before her baby’d come, then gone, so tiny
and weak and early. Never you mind, she’d said to him as well, though in her
heart she knew he hadn’t been ready either for a baby or a wife or the life
she’d tried to make for them and wanted still to have.
“So, why don’t you just settle in and
let me make you some good ole nachos?” she shouted up the steps, picking up another
bundle of dirty clothes.
“Why, they say it’s going to rain
tonight anyway, and you know those tires are so bald, they’re ‘bout to burst. Ain’t
no good in the rain, honey. You said that yourself why just last week. And Lord
knows, if anyone knows best ‘bout cars it’s you, sugar.”
She held up a white t-shirt, found a spot
of grease, a Big Mac dribble maybe or chicken fries, and poured extra detergent
on it, rubbing it together like her mother used to.
“No
sir, no good in the rain at all. Just think what a hardship it’d be having that
old jalopy go crashing into one of them big oak trees down close to town. Why,
where’d we be then, without a truck or money enough to fix it? I know how that
pains you, darlin’, having things go wrong like that. Why, you need your rest,
sweetheart. You work too hard to be burdened with troubles like that. Yes
siree, you deserve better, husband, much, much better than a smashed up pick-up
and being stuck out her in the middle of nowhere with just stupid old me for
company.”
She paused and tilted her ear toward the
stairway, cradling a new bundle of dirty clothes like the sleeping child they’d
never had. The television rumbled on. She lifted a dingy undershirt from the
pile and breathed in its acrid odor. One-by-one she peeled clothes from the
pile, checked the pockets and tossed them into the washer: his Tennessee Titans
t-shirt, the dress shirt he wore to church, plaid boxers, cotton socks,
dungarees, pushing them all into the same jumbo load, whites and colors
together until only his Sunday trousers were left.
“Why if we use the kitty we’re getting
close to having all the money for some brand new tires, so you won’t have to
give it another thought,” she said, pressing the trousers to her chest and
waiting, waiting for a response that didn’t come, again.
She sighed and held the pants out before
her as she had the dungarees and searched the pockets one by one. A half pack
of gum, a gas receipt, crumpled tissue, three pennies, one dime, a nickel, and
there in the front left pocket, a bundle of dollar bills. She smiled and
glanced up the stairs, holding the dollar bills in one hand, her mouth already
open and ready to shout out the good news.
But then she stopped. She looked again
at the folded bills and peeled them back slowly like lettuce leaves and there,
nestled beneath the dollars was a single condom, its silver foil unbroken.
She stopped, her arm bent, the crinkling
packet perched inside the green bills in her hand. For a long time, she looked
at it, its shiny package a perfect square like a York Peppermint Patty.
Then,
silently, she slid the packet back inside the bills and started to put it into
her apron pocket with the other loose change.
But then she stopped and looked around
the basement, at the shelves full of paint cans and yard tools. She crossed
over to a group of boxes stacked against the wall, and opened one labeled
“Christmas.” She dug around inside and pulled out an old Christmas cookie tin.
Holding the metal box between her knees she pried the lid off and slipped the
bundle of bills inside. She started to press the top back on, but then stopped
and scooped the extra dollar and jumble of coins from her apron pocket and
dropped them into the tin as well. The coins rattled and she quickly closed the
metal box.
Glancing up the steps, she slid the
cookie tin far back onto the laundry shelf behind the spot remover and fabric
softener. Pausing, she flopped her bag of rags over the tin and turned back to
the laundry. She scooped out a ladle of detergent and sprinkled it slowly over
the wash. She turned the washer level to jumbo and pushed the hot/warm button
and the machine came alive before her, a cascade of clean warming water rushing
over his dirty clothes.
“No, siree,” she said, to the open
washer, her voice rising ever so slightly. “Not one more worried thought ‘bout
them tires. A body can just drive, and drive and drive without a care in the
world once them tires are fixed. Now, won’t that be nice? Won’t that be worth
all the one dollars in the world?”
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I'll finish up with a little music.
Let's do this more often!