Rooster and Bear 1

Rooster and Bear

CHAPTER ONE

By Diane Dockum

Bear lay on the sofa leisurely munching a bag of chips. The ball game was on television. He was alone. A contented lull came over him. He yawned with his paw full of chips halfway to his mouth.

The door flew open with a bang. Rooster stomped up the stairs into the living room. His beak was already going.

“We goin’ fishin’ Bear?” When you gonna clean that wagon out? We can do it today! Hey! I gotta idea, we could get a movie or a pizza, we could get a movie AND a pizza, whattya say? Come on, let’s go!”

Bear froze. This bird is going to drive me crazy, he thought. Rooster’s bright yellow eyes and flapping feathers were the last thing Bear wanted at that moment.

“I don’t think I want to DO anything, Rooster. I just want to watch this game.”

“Oh, OK, I’ll watch it with you.” And he wriggled his tail feathers deep into the couch cushions at Bear’s feet, forcing him to scrunch his length up uncomfortably.

Soon, Rooster’s left foot started tapping on the floor. He shifted back and forth to get more comfortable. Then he started to preen his feathers.

“Can’t you sit still!” Bear shouted.

“Got any popcorn? I feel peckish.”

Bear let a long tired sigh escape from his throat. He climbed up out of the sofa cushions and went to his kitchen cupboard. He carefully measured his private stash of popcorn, the gourmet kind and very expensive, into his hot air corn popper and flipped the switch. The machine began to whir and vibrate loudly. The heat rose in rippling waves. Bear knew he had to find the big bowl soon or it would be too late, the corn would start shooting out of the nozzle all over the place. He searched through the tall shelves, and down low through the underneath cupboards, but no bowl. He even reached way in as far as he could.

The corn was beginning to puff up. Frantically, Bear began flinging dishes out of the cupboards. Rooster darted into the kitchen to see what the racket was. When his claws hit the linoleum he slid into the side of the china closet and all Bear’s china dishes crashed down onto him. Just then, the popcorn let loose firing kernels like a Gatling gun out onto the floor. *

(*Gatling gun here means the popcorn was coming so fast out of the popper that Bear wished he had seven or eight hands to catch it all.)

Bear grabbed a dishtowel and tried his best to stop the barrage. Rooster’s feet were sticking up through a pile of china chips and corn.

Bear was groaning and trying to catch the corn in his mouth and in his dishpans. He had gotten the best corn money could buy. It expanded to nearly three times the normal size! The kitchen was soon buried in white puffy corn.

Then the popper stopped. The corn was all finished. From under the great pile of corn and crockery, Rooster made a soft crowing sound.

“Sorry, Bear.”

-end-

Unstructured Time

Unstructured Time

 

You are eight, almost,

And it is 1962.

Kennedy is still President,

But you don’t know that

Or if you do, you don’t really

Think about it.

 

Your mother has gone into the store

To get some groceries, and

You and your sister

Are left in the 1957 Buick convertible.

The top is up because the sun is too

Bright, and makes the plastic seats hot.

 

Cars pass by, and pedestrians scuff

Along the hot sidewalk

No one knows that someday

There will be few who do not

Own a cellular phone,

So they walk along actually

Talking to their friends, who walk next

To them and make eye contact.

 

Panty hose have not been

Invented yet.

Phones have dials.

Televisions have knobs that you walk

Across the room to turn on.

Your mother still gives you a

Vitamin every morning

Before breakfast.

 

Your sister, who is five,

Sits in the back seat

Kicking the back of yours,

Thumping, thudding,

Annoying you,

As you stare through

The front window of the store

Waiting to see your mother paying

For the groceries.

 

There she is, in her red lipstick

And white cotton gloves.

Pulling paper money from her

Purse as the grocer packs the food

Carefully in cardboard boxes, and the tomato

carrier with the curved handle.

The store door jingles, as he smiles the

Boxes to the car,

Calls you Sport or shorty,

winks at your sister.

The trunk pops open

And you can’t see them anymore.

But you can hear them exchanging pleasantries.

 

“See you next time Mrs. ______,

Looks like it might rain tonight, the humidity is real high!”

You can smell the ripe bananas in the trunk,

And your mother has bought each of you

A red rubber ball with stars and stripes.

When you get home, you run around the yard

Just to feel the breeze.

 

 

 

Diane E. Dockum

March 15, 2012

 

 

 

 

 

Morning To Evening

Morning To Evening

(3 Haiku)

 

Crystal clear sunlight

Incandescing everything

Snow on iced branches

 

Ice and snow flatten

The Birch and the Mountain Ash

So cold, deer huddle

 

The setting sun lights

The ice on the tree branches

They burst into flame

 

 

by Diane E. Dockum

1.15.2012

On Writing

On Writing

I’ m having trouble thinking of things to write about. I wonder why it is so hard sometimes to get words worth reading on the page. I wonder why there are spaces of time when it is easy and it flows, and it is followed by weeks and then years when we can’t think of anything.

I’ve spent a lot of money on books about writing, and I have read them. In the middle of reading these books about writing and writer’s block I start to wonder if I am reading too much and if that is preventing me from writing.

So today I am trying writing about writing.

They say that everything you need to know about writing is found through writing. That is what life is like. You live, you learn. You write, you write. That is so Zen.

So many authors, these days, are trying to live in the moment, experiencing life as it happens. I hear them say that they don’t worry about tomorrow, that tomorrow will come and the problems that come with tomorrow will be dealt with as they happen. I have also heard that Jesus and Buddha have both said that.

When I write a poem or a story, it begins to take on a life of its own. It begins to unfold in its own way. As in life, I have to give up control, and let it go.

I am trying to do that. It is harder than it seems. Day to day worries and insecurities creep into my mind. It is 2012. They say the world will end this year on the twenty-first day of December. I really don’t believe that, BUT….things have been a little weird lately.

Who knows? Maybe the Myans just ran out of rock to chisel their calendar on. Or, maybe they just knew something we don’t know. I guess we’ll find out this year. I just don’t want to go and spend a whole lot of money on Christmas presents, and then not be able to give them away.

I’ve been talking to a writing friend, ironically by writing to her, and she writing back to me. She has always given me a little spark, just enough to push me forward. I love her for that. I know she knows who she is.

I also think that I am beginning to sound like the Late Andy Rooney.  Whatever. I always liked Andy. I just hope my eyebrows never get like his did.

Well, this is my blog about writing, and writer’s block. I can’t think of anything else to say about this subject right now, so I guess this is a good enough place to stop.

A Christmas Memoir

Prologue

The Following is a composite of memories from somewhere between the ages of 2 and 6.

My parents and siblings may not recognize these memories, as I may not recognize theirs,

for memory is a selective and personal thing.

These are shadows of Christmases past, as remembered and stored in a small child’s

brain. I hope they vibrate a chord in you and help you recall some of the wonder and

magic of Christmas.

A CHRISTMAS MEMOIR

The days leading up to Christmas were filled with anticipation. Decorations were

being added daily, until the walls were decked and the end tables were stacked with the

appropriate figurines. The Nativity set was lovingly set out on the top of the Television,

the other object of worship. I sounded out Christmas carols on the piano as quietly as

possible, so not to wake my father who was working the midnight shift.

In 1960, the year I was in the first grade, I recall Christmas coming as the smell of

white paste and wet wool. Our class room desks were arranged in a giant square around

the room, and in the center a real Scotch Pine was placed. During the final week before

Christmas vacation, the art teacher would come to our room and lead us through the

making of decorations such as snowmen and women, candy canes and red and green

construction paper chains that were strung up criss-cross the ceiling, and looped around

the tree. We all had to make our personal ornament. Mine was a construction paper

Santa, appropriately red, with black crayoned boots and a beard and coat trim of cotton

from the nurse’s office. He had a huge gold buckle on his wide black belt and blue eyes

that twinkled. Well, at least I left a white square in one that was supposed to represent

the twinkle.

Now, as this memoir is written, my mother still hangs it gently in the center of the tree, so it won’t get knocked off and ruined. Even as an adult, I still feel the wonder that went into making it, and pride that my personal ornament has lasted this long.

On the last day of school, we had a Christmas party and packed away our candies

and decorations in brown paper sacks to take home on the bus. We would be released

from school as everyone shouted “See you next year!” and pile onto our buses clutching the

paper sacks with our coloring and worksheets, art projects, and of course our ornaments

we had worked so hard on. We said good-by to our best friends for a while. We would be

on different sides of the planet until the day after Christmas, when we were allowed to

call them and compare gifts. And inevitably during the litany of gifts we would get side

tracked and completely forget to mention some of them.

My grandmother would arrive when vacation started, with much fanfare on the

scale of the arrival of the Queen Mother. She would come north on the Greyhound, and

be met at the bus stop by my father, my sister and I. We had to be spit polished, and the

house had to be spic and span. My mother would stay behind to make doubly sure

Grandma’s room was in order. She would alight from the bus bright as a penny, her

rouged and powdered cheeks glowing, her feathered hat set like a jewel on her tinted

perm. Her vast collection of aqua Samsonite luggage began to emerge from the giant door in the cargo hold of the Greyhound, jostled forward by the husky driver and my dad who placed them on the sidewalk in descending order of size.

I watched from the back seat of the DeSoto with great big butterflies in my belly. The number of suit cases was my private gauge of how long she would stay, and I never wanted her to leave. She had been an elementary-school teacher since 1917, not to mention Class Clown at Potsdam Normal, and she knew how to get to a child’s heart.

After our cheeks were pinched and our bright eyes remarked upon, Her Emeraude

Scented Highness was ensconced in the front seat. We drove home and the whole

performance was repeated in reverse as the luggage was loaded into her room. While

this was happening, we were treated to the opening of the purse.

Grandma had a giant black Patent Leather purse that I am sure could have easily

concealed a small child. The clasp was gold and very strong. At first I would try to open

it, my duty as the oldest child. She would be too busy removing her hat and gloves and

getting her coat off, and the clear plastic coverings over her high heels had to be pulled

off. But, when the pocket book opened there would be a waft of the smell of Juicy Fruit

Gum and we were treated to a stick each.

Sometimes it took a few minutes to find in the vast recesses of the purse, but then

Grandma could always reach in and locate them, handing them out like Trick or Treats.

In hindsight I recognize this as a tactic to distract us from the unpacking of her

gifts from those suitcases. On her other visits it was always a treat to watch as she

unpacked, but now, I know the largest suit case held her last-minute gift ideas, and the

quantity of luggage did not necessarily foretell her length of stay.

As Christmas grew near, the annual box of Ribbon Candy she brought was set out

on the coffee table. I tried to like it, but never could get past the acid green brittle loops

that shattered in your hands and threatened to “put your eye out”. Between the ribbon

candy and the peanut brittle, I am lucky I have a tooth left.

Eventually, after teasing ”When are we getting the tree?” It would appear on the

porch, scenting the sharp air with its piney aroma. Usually it had to sit on the porch for a

few days, they said, to open up, to melt the gobs of snow clinging to its needles, but I

now know it was waiting for my mother to get time to put it up. She worked full time as a Registered Nurse, and left in the morning before daylight, and came home after dark.

My sister and I would agonize over that tree, and when it was finally brought in, we’d

have the Christmas Tree Dance, skipping gaily around the tree in circles before it was

decorated, like some instinctual pagan welcoming ritual, while it stood in its metal stand

in the middle of the linoleumed living room. One year, our dance was so frantic we

knocked it over and were sent our room to calm down. We were mortified.

I remember one Christmas (or two) when they built a fake fireplace at the end of

the double living room. They took pictures of me in my footed pajamas, looking intently

up its non-existent chimney. Grinning, with Kodak in hand, they coaxed me to see if

Santa was coming. I thought to myself, how can he come down inside a bunch of red

cardboard blocks? Yet I looked up inside it, as self-doubt set in. Maybe he could, I

thought. Wasn’t he Santa, and wasn’t Santa a magical creature? He magically filled our

little parlor with gifts, things we loved and treasured, things we didn’t know we’d even

wanted, secretly in our deepest selves.

I admit, he had a little help deciding what to bring us. Every year we would say

our list to Daddy and after he wrote them down, he would take us out to the snow bank

and put our lists in an old coffee can. Then he would light them on fire, and we could

actually see the black letters whirling up into space on their way to the North Pole.

There, they would settle on His great red book, and form words.

Then came THE NIGHT.

Christmas Eve. The excruciatingly long night. There would be Church and

Supper and Bath Time, then Mom would read us ” ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas”

. And it is true, visions did dance in our heads as we lie there in the dark, and every creak

and crackle was listened to with wonder.

If we were at all reluctant to go to bed, we would be told the story of how Sharp

Eyes, one of Santa’s most trusted Elves, was watching us, ready to report any misbehavior, or there would be footsteps on the roof and reindeer bells jingled outside on

the lawn to spur us up the stairs and into our beds.

Later, I found out that my Uncle Dan came over without anyone knowing, and

added these sound effects. But the magic was so manifest, my skin prickled. Because of

this, there is part of me that will always believe.

One Christmas Eve it seemed like there was no night at all. I crawled into bed,

shut my eyes, opened my eyes and it was morning. I could smell the coffee brewing in

the percolator. It must have been the previous day of sledding that tired me out so.

As I came down the stairs and peered over the banister, there was a pinkish glow

hovering like mist, coming from the tree lights and reflecting off the tinsel and wrapping

paper. There was no movement, only the pendulum of the clock reminding me that time

had not stood still.

I crept a little further down the stairway and saw Grandma’s rocker gently

moving, her apricot colored curls showing slightly above the back of the chair. She sat

alone, admiring the tree, sipping her coffee and soaking in the peace, wearing her

husband’s old wool plaid bathrobe for remembrance, and missing him, I supposed. He

had died the year I was born.

I silently chose a seat on the sofa trying not to disturb her private thoughts, and

helped her in her vigil. Since that time, when I was around five, this has also been part of

my ritual.

We turned the radio on, and as it warmed up, Christmas Carols drifted into the air.

As the house came awake and daylight came through the east windows, the

excitement began to build. Soon the family, one by one, would gather at the tree. My

sister, only about two, would kneel near the tree, her eyes shining with the lights. Some

presents were lifted carefully, and checked for names, everyone unwilling to destroy the scene.

Mom would join Grandma with her coffee cup, and we would watch for Dad to come

up the hill and pull into the drive-way. In his Pinkerton Guard Uniform he would act

surprised and ask “Who was here?’

We would all laugh that Daddy forgot it was Christmas and begin passing gifts around. There were still, at that time, only the two of us little girls. My brother and baby sister had not yet been thought of.  We would choose a present for Grandma, and sit at her feet as she opened it, then Dad, then Mom, and finally one of us girls would get to open a box.

We weren’t the kind that tore open the paper greedily and threw it helter skelter,

we savored every piece of tape, every fold, slowly revealing our gift. Some how it made

Christmas last a little longer.

After a while, we drifted to the kitchen where breakfast was served, and the turkey

was stuffed, trussed and put into the oven for our Christmas dinner.

The photographs in our album are tribute to the hard work and sacrifice my

parents and grandmother made to give us a magical, loving, thoughtful experience. They

show our quiet, glowing, gift filled space; the tree and its lights, the cards suspended

across the archway.

They show the peace. And some of the pictures show my little sister and I in our

matching nighties and Pixie hair cuts, grinning in front of the tree, red spots in our eyes.

Diane E. Dockum

A Crooked Mile

Lately I’ve had Vertigo, a problem with my inner ear which makes you dizzy and lose your balance. It has been about a month so far, and it hasn’t gone away. It inspired this poem:

A Crooked Mile

If I were to walk a mile today

It would be a crooked path

For my own private earthquake

Is wreaking perfect wrath

 

As if the ground were shaking

My eyes can’t focus fast

Upon my intended purpose

Or my small but needed task

 

My body’s natural disaster

Has a beginning and an end

Sudden as it came, they say,

That it will sudden end

 

Until that time I will progress

And walk my crooked mile

I’ll fix my eye to the distant goal

And bear it with a smile

 

by Diane E. Dockum

11/12/11

Found poem

I found this poem in an old notebook, I remember someone asked me to write a poem about a quilt, because she was a quilter. We were in a bar at the time. The softball game had just ended. The guys were playing foosball.

 

PATCHWORK PIECES

 

Patchwork pieces

Grandma’ s quilt

Threads that link

Generations

 

Uncle Harry’s boxer shorts

Aunt Mae’s apron

Worn to make the bread

Flannel pajamas

 

Of countless children

And sixty cousin’s cousins

Held together

With love

 

 

by Diane E. Dockum

A little wisdom from Natalie Goldberg

I hope she doesn’t mind, but I have been kind of “hard of writing” lately. I recently read this and wanted to share it. It’s like sharing something on facebook isn’t it?

I don’t think there’s anything wrong with that. Here goes…

“In the center of our speed, in the core of our forward movement, we are often confused and lonely. That is why we have turned so full-heartedly to the memoir form. We have an intuition it will save us. Writing is the act of reaching across the abyss of isolation to share and reflect. It’s not a diet to become skinny, but a relaxation into the fat of our lives. Often, without realizing it, we are on a quest, a search for meaning. What does our time on this earth add up to?”

 

–Natalie Goldberg, Old Friend From Far Away

 

 

Maybe next time, I’ll have something of my own to share.

 

 

The Ticking of Clocks

As if a fog has closed in around me

I become near sighted, and

Struggle to read the signs

My color has faded

My edges have become dull.

Where does it go from here,

And how can I get back to where

I can see clearly,

And my shallow breathing

Takes on new life?

Thoughts wander in and out of reality.

They search for sun and nourishment,

Yet whither in the rounded

Corners of space.

Unknowing what is causing this,

My hands fumble for the familiar

Stars, which are careening away

Out of reach.

Is this what it feels like,

Saying good-bye to youth?

The ticking of clocks

Seem louder than usual.

Diane E. Dockum

09.23.11

A Good Cry

There are times when all you need is a good cry. My daughter said this to me the other day when I asked her how things were going. I really knew how she felt.

When we are going through a hard time, things get to be too much. So many these days are experiencing frustration, sadness, loss, financial problems. It’s just hard to get your life in order. But without the bad times we wouldn’t recognize the good times. I know, a cliche.

It would be so nice if all we really needed was a good cry to cleanse our inner mind and wring the nasty feelings out of our psyche.

 

A Good Cry

 

I need to sit and have a good cry.

Bone-deep weeping and calling out

in spasmodic sobs

to express that woefulness

that steals my words,

that shuts off my breathing

with hard, strangling fingers

 

A good bleeding weep

until the marrow rattles free

and body fluids flow again

unhindered,

filling my hollow limbs with warmth

where now

it is like winter.

 

My words gone, my mind numb

there is nothing left

but water squeezed through

tiny holes

straining pain like pasta

in a sieve, running hot,

then cold to firm it up

 

There is no other way but weeping

there is no alternative

but speechless, primal groans and

tightened stretched lips

across the teeth

and tears that run

unimpeded

 

And after this,

an unnatural quiet

where the mind wanders

an unfamiliar landscape,

watching lightning flash

within the receding clouds.

 

 

Diane E. Dockum