His name was Lucho. At least that's what I thought it was.
He introduced himself while I sat on a park bench,
cafe con leche in one hand and a cigarette dangling from the other.
He lectured me on the cigarette. I think.
I'd traveled half a world, my baggage unchecked.
I envisioned warmth, and drinks, and perhaps an exotic lover.
The streets were busy, restaurants were full.
Everything about this place, where we'd never been,
made me think of him.
Lucho smiled when he asked for my number
and I smiled when I gave it to him.
As She Wanders
Sometimes I walk a straight line. Other times I backtrack. There's a spin thrown in here and there.
Sunday, November 18, 2012
Friday, March 23, 2012
finely tuned machine
Order in the world wasn't a question. It was the only thing that gave him comfort. He didn't need a philosophy class or a theologian or any new agey books to tell him what he knew to be true. It might not look fair now but, in the end, he knew it'd all make sense. He didn't even let the preposterous idea of chance and randomness and a world devoid of a great karmic reckoning flutter across his field of view. In the blue flicker of the nightly news, he would mutter about motives being weighed by the Lord and the righteous standing firm forever. There was nobody to hear. But sometimes his dog would look up from his well worn corner- staring, it seemed, right through him.
This post was prompted by the picture above, posted at Magpie Tales. Click the picture for the link.
(Thank you Eco for the nudge.)
This post was prompted by the picture above, posted at Magpie Tales. Click the picture for the link.
(Thank you Eco for the nudge.)
Labels:
Magpie
Tuesday, March 06, 2012
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
the man too mean to die
He died.
He was 17 years old when he fought in Korea, a boy in a Marine's uniform.
Later he sandpapered off his own tattoos that he got while 'on peninsula.' I can only hope he was on pain meds from one of his many back surgeries, an injury possibly sustained in war.
The night before his wedding to my beauty queen grandmother he got in a fight. I suppose they put makeup on his black eye, but you can't hide the swelling in photos.
He was a big, looming man with black hair and a scary grin. Sometimes he'd just let his gap-toothed smile go, making his whole face kinda round. My mom's got the same smile.
Fear and respect were the same thing to him.
He'd say, "I wish I was rich instead of so damn good lookin'." This always made me laugh- he was handsome, a few times confused for Elvis back in both their heydays. And he was smart. His mind never stopped. Never.
My dad remembers going to tell him that my mother, smack dab in the middle of her teen years, was pregnant. Grandpa was fixing a fence on their Montana mountain property where they raised hogs. He was hammering and hammering, even as my dad approached saying at least a few times, "Uh, Mr. Rutledge I need to talk to you." He stopped what he was doing but held onto that hammer, "You're gonna marry her." Nothing else was said.
He was raised rich, and the rest of his life he spent looking for ways to get back to it. He was a realtor in LA in the early 60s. Later moving to Montana once he had enough kids for "kid power"- his euphemism for child labor. He became a boxing coach when my strapping uncle was old enough and big enough to possibly make him rich; his protege made it all the way to the ring at Caesar's Palace. His surprise inheritance, the last of the oil money, he blew in two years living large around the world. He was also an artist, able to carve wood with his chainsaw; I watched QVC sell his bear cubs, but it chewed him up that my uncle (who'd long since put his boxing gloves down) was innately talented and, frankly, much better at carving. He went on to be a painter, not making much money but damn if his paintings aren't beautiful.
When I was 6, he taught me a little sleight of hand game where you miscount your fingers so you always come up to 11; I enjoyed it then and I've made my nieces and nephews giggle when I tell them they have an extra finger. He also went through a brief period of calling me when I was a younger teen, I didn't quite know what to say and he always kinda scared me. The last time I saw him, I was visiting Montana in 2005. I stopped at his little place, small and depressing on the outside but organized and cozy on the inside. He still scared me, even though he was being affable and seemed delighted with my visit. His hearing so bad that he spent most the time saying what and me being too self conscious to yell loud enough to be heard.
6 foot-something, at least 200 pounds, 76 years old, he'd had cancer and heart attacks- and then one more. He was the terror of my mom's childhood but this is still a deep loss for her.
My heart hurts for my mom, and for the boy before he was the man too mean to die.
(originally posted June 26, 2011)
He was 17 years old when he fought in Korea, a boy in a Marine's uniform.
Later he sandpapered off his own tattoos that he got while 'on peninsula.' I can only hope he was on pain meds from one of his many back surgeries, an injury possibly sustained in war.
The night before his wedding to my beauty queen grandmother he got in a fight. I suppose they put makeup on his black eye, but you can't hide the swelling in photos.
He was a big, looming man with black hair and a scary grin. Sometimes he'd just let his gap-toothed smile go, making his whole face kinda round. My mom's got the same smile.
Fear and respect were the same thing to him.
He'd say, "I wish I was rich instead of so damn good lookin'." This always made me laugh- he was handsome, a few times confused for Elvis back in both their heydays. And he was smart. His mind never stopped. Never.
My dad remembers going to tell him that my mother, smack dab in the middle of her teen years, was pregnant. Grandpa was fixing a fence on their Montana mountain property where they raised hogs. He was hammering and hammering, even as my dad approached saying at least a few times, "Uh, Mr. Rutledge I need to talk to you." He stopped what he was doing but held onto that hammer, "You're gonna marry her." Nothing else was said.
He was raised rich, and the rest of his life he spent looking for ways to get back to it. He was a realtor in LA in the early 60s. Later moving to Montana once he had enough kids for "kid power"- his euphemism for child labor. He became a boxing coach when my strapping uncle was old enough and big enough to possibly make him rich; his protege made it all the way to the ring at Caesar's Palace. His surprise inheritance, the last of the oil money, he blew in two years living large around the world. He was also an artist, able to carve wood with his chainsaw; I watched QVC sell his bear cubs, but it chewed him up that my uncle (who'd long since put his boxing gloves down) was innately talented and, frankly, much better at carving. He went on to be a painter, not making much money but damn if his paintings aren't beautiful.
When I was 6, he taught me a little sleight of hand game where you miscount your fingers so you always come up to 11; I enjoyed it then and I've made my nieces and nephews giggle when I tell them they have an extra finger. He also went through a brief period of calling me when I was a younger teen, I didn't quite know what to say and he always kinda scared me. The last time I saw him, I was visiting Montana in 2005. I stopped at his little place, small and depressing on the outside but organized and cozy on the inside. He still scared me, even though he was being affable and seemed delighted with my visit. His hearing so bad that he spent most the time saying what and me being too self conscious to yell loud enough to be heard.
6 foot-something, at least 200 pounds, 76 years old, he'd had cancer and heart attacks- and then one more. He was the terror of my mom's childhood but this is still a deep loss for her.
My heart hurts for my mom, and for the boy before he was the man too mean to die.
(originally posted June 26, 2011)
The Third January
i was asked if i wanted a picture
i could hardly whisper no
before tears began their fall
(originally posted January 2011)
i could hardly whisper no
before tears began their fall
(originally posted January 2011)
Labels:
Verse
Instead of the Paper
wet kisses trace the spine
firm hands hold here
and there
promises and dirty words
buried against skin
coffee cups left
to the morning sun
steam rises
(originally posted March 17, 2011)
firm hands hold here
and there
promises and dirty words
buried against skin
coffee cups left
to the morning sun
steam rises
(originally posted March 17, 2011)
Labels:
Verse
Folksy Wisdom
If it ain't fun, don't do it.
If it ain't tasty, don't eat it.
If it ain't top-shelf, don't drink it.
If it ain't true, don't live it.
If it ain't love, don't waste it.
If it ain't kind, don't keep it.
(Originally posted March 19, 2011 and prompted by The One-Minute Writer.)
If it ain't tasty, don't eat it.
If it ain't top-shelf, don't drink it.
If it ain't true, don't live it.
If it ain't love, don't waste it.
If it ain't kind, don't keep it.
(Originally posted March 19, 2011 and prompted by The One-Minute Writer.)
Digger Man Blues
i'm feelin' low down cuz my man's gone away
yeah, i'm feelin' real down, my man he's gone away
didn't need nothin' special, just wanted him to stay
he used to call me baby when he held me real tight
he used to call me baby, he held me in his arms real tight
now i'm all alone, even sleep don't come at night
my man ain't comin' back, tell me it ain't true
no, my man ain't comin' back, it just cain't be true
i'm beat up, i'm tore up, i'm just so sad and blue
(originally posted March 15, 2011)
yeah, i'm feelin' real down, my man he's gone away
didn't need nothin' special, just wanted him to stay
he used to call me baby when he held me real tight
he used to call me baby, he held me in his arms real tight
now i'm all alone, even sleep don't come at night
my man ain't comin' back, tell me it ain't true
no, my man ain't comin' back, it just cain't be true
i'm beat up, i'm tore up, i'm just so sad and blue
(originally posted March 15, 2011)
Labels:
Verse
Monday, July 25, 2011
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