UMBRELLA

Under the darkening sky I stand

My trusty umbrella in my hand

Brighter days ahead, they say

Reawaken Spring I pray

Equinox has come and gone

Lacking meaning, what a con!

Liberate this frozen sod

A fervent prayer to a merciful God

 

© April 1, 2018

by Diane E. Dockum

THE VOICES

Have the voices in your head gone silent?

When you were younger, they rarely ceased,

At times, drowning out your own voice.

You thought it was God.

Now, you know better, or at least you think you do.

Who knows? Maybe it WAS God.

She told you stories, sometimes.

Gave you guidance when you were lost

Entertained your lonely hours.

When you stopped listening

She hammered at the doorway of your soul

Until you let her back in.

May have been your Muse. I wonder.

There was more than one.

And in the quiet of the afternoon

When shadows started the slant across the yard,

The voices came awake.

Or, in the early part of sleep,

At the edge of unconsciousness,

The babble formed into words

You were too tired to rise and write.

Now, regretfully, you THINK you should have —

KNOW you should have given them credence.

No, they have not gone. As you grow old

The voices drift through at higher speeds

Making it harder to keep up.

And sleep comes to dull the inner senses.

So, while you are aware, take the time.

Do not ignore the fleeting moments of clarity.

Embrace Her, before she is but a specter,

A phantom caught at the corner of your eye,

Waving silently as she fades.

© 2009, by Diane E. Dockum

Storm

It came upon us and here we sit

Several candles have been lit

The darkness stretches through the night

So quiet, not a sound tonight

In the distant sky with clouds so low

Reflects a soft and eerie glow

A town with lights six miles away

Has nightlife, hot food, a small café

Meanwhile here in Murkiville

We go to bed and take a pill.

 

 

©April 14, 2018

Diane E. Dockum

 

The Lost Wisdom of Childhood

The label on the bottle declared in swirling cursive “The Lost Wisdom of Childhood”. It was a small brown glass bottle with a silver stopper, which fit like a cork with a round clear globe on top.

I came upon this bottle on a shelf in the back of my grandmother’s closet while searching for a photograph album.

It stopped me there, looking at it in the dim light, as if it was written, “drink me”, and I was Alice.

The photograph book forgotten, I reached for it with reverence, and slipped it into my pocket. With a thrilling glee within, I backed out of the closet, closed its door, and locked myself in the bathroom.

Sitting on the closed lid of the toilet in the quiet house, I retrieved the bottle and held it up to the light. Running my thumb over its label, the lettering, I discovered, was raised. Hand-written in heavy black ink. Who had made this marvelous thing, I wondered. Was it some whimsy bought in an obscure shop on a long ago jaunt to a far away place?

My grandmother was a traveler, a seeker if you will. My grandmother had a secret past, which lit her face with joy, and a quiet peace.

She had passed on a few years ago, but her things were still here, in her closet, in our family home. I had not noticed this before. Her privacy was something sacred. We felt the guilt of trespass when we thought of snooping through her dresser drawers, or in her closet. We thought of it, my sisters and I. We were curious.

Our grandmother was not a closed person though. She was the bringer of laughter, a bright witty talker, and a generous hugger.

Holding it before me, I could see there was some liquid inside. I swirled it left and right, and it appeared to be some sort of syrup. It had a sweet, sticky appearance, as it would slightly adhere to the sides of the glass bottle.

Why did I hesitate to open the stopper? Why did I not want to break the seal? I wanted to taste the wisdom of childhood, but having the knowledge of adulthood, I might know the pain of the distance between.

Ephemeral wisdom once tasted, creates a longing for something that cannot remain.

II

Enchanted, I placed the bottle carefully in the back of my vanity drawer and went back downstairs to find a chore to do. All the while my thoughts danced with the expectation of opening that bottle.

It distracted me at work. It niggled at my mind until finally I had to carry it with me at all times.

The bottle then remained in my pocket for a week. At night I would look at it, and while getting ready for bed it would sit on the bathroom stand. But during the day it resided in my pocket. The label started to wear, so I then decided that if I wasn’t going to open it, I should find a better place to keep it.

I went to the bank and got a safety deposit box. I know it seems silly to pay for a safety deposit box just for a bottle of mysterious fluid. But it had sentimental value. I wasn’t sure that if I left it in my home or in my pocket that I wouldn’t drink it down to gain that lost wisdom proclaimed on the label.

This could not go on.

***

Winter came, and long dark days. Cold that was colder than any cold I could remember crept into my bones. They said it was the Arctic Vortex. The snow banks grew without mercy. I became depressed.

The little bottle called softly to me in my sleep. Maybe there was joy in there; liquefied well-being. If I opened the bottle should I just sniff it, or should I swallow it? Were there portion sizes? I had to know.

I returned to the closet to search for clues. Under a pile of shoes against the back wall there was a small brown journal. I can’t explain the thrill I felt as I held it in my hand.

The writing inside was in faint and smeared pencil, as if the journal had been read often with someone running their finger over the lines. Someone studied this journal. I had never seen this before. It seemed as if these things were manifesting themselves in that closet as needed.

Through the hours of darkness, I turned page after page until my eyes prickled from exhaustion. It seemed the words were in some language unknown to me.

 

© April 13, 2018

By Diane E. Dockum

 

 

 

 

 

 

STRING THEORY

 

A jar of toenail clippings

Sits on the mantle

And the made up math

Is all over the wall.

Scattered papers & notebooks

Show the theory as it evolves,

Proving that cats love string.

 

As the graviton spins,

The twisted fiber gathers

Electromagnetic charges

And sticks to the fur of the

Unsuspecting feline

With great ease,

Giving the cat the illusion

That the string is actually alive

And is following its every move

 

The gravitational force

Allows the animal to

Fling itself gleefully

Onto the floor kicking wildly

And sending quantum energy

Into ten space-time dimensions.

 

 

©April 12, 2018

by Diane E. Dockum

 

 

Something Heavy in the Air

 

Something heavy in the air

The smoke from chimneys

Hangs low

 

Like fog over the road —

Like prayers trapped by

Unbelief –

 

They fail to lift higher

Than the rooftops

From which they were shouted

 

My eyes burn, my tears run

Something heavy in my heart

My ears catch a sound

 

Whispers distant and pleading

Repeat a prayer

Without ceasing

 

A collective sigh

Ripples in ever widening circles

Washing up against our shore

 

 

By Diane E. Dockum

re-posted from a post 2 years ago

 

 

THE WAITING ROOM

Down under the brick building

In the most dismal cement corner of the cellar

Is a medical office

Where there is a gray indoor-outdoor carpeted floor

Ringed with chairs

 

A bulletin board overfilled with useless flyers

Screamed commands at the patrons

 

PAYMENT DUE PRIOR TO SERVICES and

TURN OFF ALL CELL PHONES!!!

I wonder why they want us to turn off our cell phones.

We are waiting. We are bored. We are not at the opera.

We are not pumping gas.

 

I want to read my E-book

On my cell phone.

 

Up in the corner of the ceiling

There is a speaker playing a series

Of harsh, repetitive music from the 90s.

I gave several sighs and looks at it

And shook my head

 

But no one

Did anything about it.

 

Behind the sliding glass window

The ladies were all smiles

And casually chatted with patients

As they checked in and out

 

 

 

 

©April 10, 2018

by Diane E. Dockum

I’m writing to say

April 9, 2018

 

Dear Dad,

 

I’m writing to say Happy Birthday, and that I’m remembering you today. It’s not often that I email you from here, but today is a good day to do it. It was a hard day today for me because I saw a picture of you and it was one I didn’t have. It was kind of strange seeing you again at the age you left. Most of the time I see you as a younger man. I see you as a young father, with dishpan hands and a pack of Lucky Strikes in your pocket. I see you with a damp dishtowel over your shoulder as you shampoo my baby brother in the kitchen sink. It’s all encapsulated in a tunnel of time. At night, as I stand on my back porch and look at the stars, I remember watching the moon in the backyard with you adjusting your telescope toward the brightest constellation. You would talk about UFOs and how you always wanted to see one. But the closest you ever got was a meteorite, which you mistakenly cemented into the front step thinking it was an oddly shaped rock. I know you wanted to dig that thing out and use it as a doorstop instead. Someday someone will find it there when the house falls in and they build a new one in its place. I hope you feel your best and are happy there. I hope you see all your dreams come true. I wish you had spent a little more time because I was just getting to know you as an adult. I am so upset that I put off visiting you and taking time to be with you before you left. I thought we had more time. Well, you never know, do you? Anyway, save a place for me at the table. I’ll be with you in a while. We can really catch up. Happy birthday, Daddy.

 

© April 9, 2018

By Diane E. Dockum

WILL SPRING EVER COME?

 

It’s snowing hard, the ground was pretty clear

Until now. Big fluffy flakes.

It looks like it’s sticking.

This has been a spring of hard starters.

Things are dragging on and nothing is easy

Will spring ever come?

 

From the recliner, his throat closes

Periodically, making him snort and snore

Sometimes loud and harsh enough to make him

Wake up opening his eyes in little slits

Then back to the dream, he was having

 

Another movie plays to the living room

No one is watching

Upstairs there is an old cat

On the sill of the open bathroom window

The furnace kicks on because

It is 36 degrees outside

 

The younger cat

A calico

With a sticky something

Matting the fur on her lower back

Probably from burrowing around in the attic

Watches pigeons out the downstairs window

 

The birds are looking for warmth

And huddle together

Along the power lines

Will spring ever come?

 

 

© April 8, 2018

Diane E. Dockum

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Another Lap

I need to be inspired

I can’t think of anything to say

Days loom before me

And I have had spits and starts

Like an old engine

That’s been sitting in a shed for years

Under a tarp with a mouse nest in the manifold

My mind has gone flatline

I cant remember dreams but

I remember dreaming

I wake up with numb hands and arms

But soon it passes

Now I think I wake up with a numb brain

I’m a numb skull

Just like my gym teacher used to call us

“All right you numbskulls take another lap!”

©April 9, 2018

by Diane E. Dockum

**note to self: Miss Rita Hiter called us Nuckleheads, not Numbskulls. I feel this makes the whole poem fallacious.