My poem “Someone Else’s Memory” was published today at Writing in a Woman’s Voice. My thanks to editor Beate Sigriddaughter.
Pat and I sit drinking cocoa
on a snow-clad December day.
Remember that Christmas Eve,
she says, when we were young
and went caroling with my cousins?
I gave you my blue stocking cap
you wound round and round
your neck to stay warm.
And in a rush, I remember the night,
the carols, that Bill sang loud
and out of tune, my new, not-warm-
enough red coat, and her cap
I found years later in a crushed box
on the closet floor, dirty from muddy boots
and dust, wondered who it belonged to,
how it wound up there—the cap I washed
and reached out the car window to give
to a homeless man, how he thanked me
and put it on, wrapping it round and round
his neck, grinning through broken teeth.
i really like this oneSent from my iPad
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Thanks, Steve!
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wonderful. You took me there. I see his face, his chipped teeth.
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Thank you, Sherry. Hope you’re still writing lots of poems.
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wonderful; loved the detail —
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Thanks so much, John!
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Like paying it forward with the offer of warmth and all the world becomes a better place… I like the easy flow so the reader seems to know Pat and Bill as well…
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Thanks, Rajani. I’m glad you liked it.
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I always appreciate a touching poem, all the more so this week. Thank you, Sarah.
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Thanks, Alarie. Yes, my new mantra is to be kind.
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Sarah, I suspect that “be kind” has always been your mantra.
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Love it.
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Thanks Louella.
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