A Forced Smile by Brynn Lietuvnikas

When I was five years old, my doctor handed Mother a sheet of paper. She gazed at it, a hint of curiosity and possibility in her eyes. I looked from her to the doctor. His face was impossibly graver. “Am I dying?” I whispered. Mother handed me the paper while she searched in her purse for a pen to sign it. It was warm from the official hospital printer. It read: Defect, physical and mental changes may occur to this patient due to external persons’ unconscious desires. “Mom, what’s a–what’s a…” She waited. “…de-ff-ect?” I sounded it out.

         Years later, I walked through the kindergarten door and my hair turned greasy and brown. The other girls didn’t seem to notice, but I thought I saw the teacher’s eyebrows knit. My hair changed back to blonde when I got home, but every time I came to school, it would happen again. I asked Lissie from school about her curly locks on Tuesday. She had crowned herself queen of us girls, and a natural smile crossed her lips when I asked her about herself. “Isn’t my hair sooo pretty? It’s like gold! No one else’s hair is like mine.”

         I got my first grammar assignment in third-grade. My pencil pressed too hard in blocky lettering, and every time I had to erase, my frustration grew. I called loudly for my mother. My lips quickly intertwined into something unable to open. Mother and Father were busy talking in hushed, angered voices in the dining room, but I was beginning to cry and needed to interrupt them. I made guttural sounds with the back of my throat until Father finally came into the living room to see me. He asked what it was. My lips were able to part again so I could explain to him my problem. We stared at the workbook together for a while. He sighed and decided English wacks must have changed shit because he had no idea what a Direct Object was. My father told me that I was smart, that I had been the one taught the fancy new lingo, that I could figure it out on my own. He left, and I figured it out.

         My parents’ angered conversations got louder as school blurred into summer. I learned to head for the fields of hay outside whenever the name “Brenda” was mentioned. If I was there long after they said that name, Father or Mother would begin questioning me about loyalty. As they took turns looking at me, I could feel my face change. My father had a broad-set face, with strength if not beauty. When he looked at me, my nose would expand to match his. When Mother did, I could feel my eyes flicker to her blue-gray. By the time school started up again, it happened even when they weren’t fighting.

         Sixth-grade was when things got especially hard. Every period, we went to a different classroom with a different teacher. It felt like each teacher had different expectations. Some were OK with talking. Some got mad if you breathed too loud. Ms. Joice had just lost her daughter to a case of the measles. I didn’t want to think about what happened to my body when I went to her class. Because of these constant changes, the other students looked at me weird. Because of me, the school newsletter wrote a column about how to approach the subject of defective individuals when the talk came up with their children. The kids in my class still played with me during recess, though. The only game I didn’t play with them was the race game. Everyone wanted to be the fastest, so I was always last.

         My father bought a new house with Brenda. Custody issues were resolved in court, and I spent some months with him and some with Mother. In summers at Mother’s house, sometimes I would forget the sound of my own voice. Father took up a passion for art, so I didn’t talk to him much either. Brenda loved to talk, though. She said every child should be raised in California. She said all salads should be made her way. She said I should look over the weight loss programs in her magazines. She said a real woman could keep her man.

         Change was a part of life, a part of my life in particular. Once I started high school, it started to hurt more, though. On the way to Brenda and Father’s place, my insides were crushed and squeezed. They kept trying to get smaller. On the way to Mother’s, my skin would become smooth and hairless, everything would pop into place until I was her little girl. On the way to class, different pieces of me would twitch into various shapes. I felt like a puzzle with its pieces flipped upside down and forced together.

         It became a habit of mine to get ready in the dark. I memorized the squirt needed for the right amount of toothpaste, where the holes in my shirts were, and how to place a pad in the exact middle of my underwear. All without needing to feel for it. All without a chance of looking in the mirror.

         By the time I graduated high school, it felt like independence had come too late. Every part of me held a grudge against the other. The college catalog boasted of several programs and clubs, but I didn’t know what I was good at; I didn’t know what I liked. Instead, I moved out and took a gap year to build up work experience.         In front of me, the kitchen, living room, dining room, and bedroom of my new apartment were all smushed together into a single space. It was claustrophobic. It was cast in soft brown and dull blue–forgettable colors. But tears fell down my cheeks without consent. I was alone, truly and utterly. And that made me happy. My crying made it hard to breathe without gasping. I went into the bathroom–the only room that was separate–to blow my nose with some toilet paper. From years of practice, I averted my eyes from the mirror during the process. Something itched at me, though. I was miles away from my hometown, from my parents, Brenda, and all my old classmates. What if…? I looked up into the reflective surface in front of me; I gazed into the mirror. And there I was. I searched for something foreign in my features, for the creature that must have lurked inside of me, the one that rearranged my organs until they looked pretty from the outside. There was no such being. Heart thundering in my chest (I was breaking my rules!), I lifted the front of my shirt. Soon, I was standing naked. I was a girl. Just a normal person. Slightly underweight, with a nose some would call too long or narrow, but I was a person. Underneath my defect, what people wanted me to see and do, I was a person. “Who would have thought?” I whispered.

Brynn Lietuvnikas has written many stories, some of which have been published by Hedge Apple. This story, though laced with fantasy elements, strikes close to home. Her whole life, she has struggled with defining femininity and what its place is in her life. When she came across “The Divine Feminine” prompt, she decided to give the internal issue another shot at working itself out on the page. She is proud of the resulting piece, and she looks forward to seeing how her future self will continue to write on the matter.

Antares by Jaqueline Rose Gregory

my color is Red

says the star Antares

scorpio stings one thousand deaths

leaving a breathless body

to rot in the desert

her eyes see through you

her eyes fill your soul with fear

she holds her composure

this is really the true light in her

they think it’s dangerous

it’s her only protection

from the raging sea

the storm forms a swell,

that sucks the anger from within

when she opens her eyes

her star is shining

brighter than the sun

Antares looks over her

like a protector

with a shield

the battle is over

the sting subsides

her color is still Red

and the bitch within

can finally breathe

An Ode to my Period by Jaqueline Rose Gregory

Dear Uterus,

You crimson red bloody bitch. The color crimson is described as royalty, nobility, love and affection.  Painted on a wall could bring a noble, lovable feeling.  Painted in my panties at the most inopportune time only brings hate and disdain.  The only time I looked forward to seeing your bloody self was in my younger promiscuous years when I would pray for you instead of a child.  As a married adult trying to conceive was impossible.  No thanks to mental illness and being required to stay on medication were you able to stay in control and not give birth to a baby.  Yes, I could have gotten pregnant.  I did not want to be medicated and pregnant.  Sure, it was my choice to not get pregnant due to my mental illness and you did not make it easy.  You brought on a regularity for some time when I ingested the birth control pill to ultimately keep you from joining me at those most inconvenient times during dating and even working. 

The four months I pushed my body to the max during my Army boot camp days was the only time you decided to go incognito.  No blood during physical fitness tests.  No blood during road marches.  No blood standing in platoon formation for what seemed like hours.  No blood during our drill practice to become soldiers.  I had no hate and disdain for you then.  Just appreciation that my body held me in high regards during the most physically, mentally and emotionally trying time of my existence. 

I tried to have you removed from my body ultimately to have you win out the battle.  Diabetes ran the show in December 2019 and seems to be running this ship now. 

The disdain and hate come from a place of you sticking around when I want you gone.  I wanted to have a baby.  I wanted to conceive a child and feel what it was like to carry a child to full term.  I wanted to feel life growing inside me.  Was it because of my promiscuous younger years that you kept a baby from me?  I don’t understand when I needed you most you would abandon me.  You have spoiled a fair amount of my panties it’s absurd.  I have spent an obscene amount of money on you to keep you from ruining my clothes.  You seep through the liners and soak my jeans.  I have scrubbed an enormous amount of work chairs due to your lack of flexibility.  After my last manic episode, I had from medication to become a mother I decided to stay off birth control and let you control me.  My husband had his vasectomy and so it’s final.  No child to call our own.  Now the second round to have you removed and you decide that you are here to stay. 

Well, fuck you, you crimson red bloody bitch.  I pray you shrivel up with the fibroid cysts you implanted in my body.  I’m stronger than you.  I have dealt with you for years.  If you aren’t going anywhere then bring it on.  I started walking 1 mile around our neighborhood twice a day to help me deal with the cramps you insist on antagonizing me with.  I consume more water on a daily basis to try to flush out the sugars lingering in my blood stream.  You may be here to stay.  Just know I won’t give up the fight.  I’m not going anywhere either.  So, if we are stuck to each other I will make up some ground rules. 

Ground rule #1 please control my hormones so I can give up being a bitch to my husband during this season of figuring out if you will come or go.  I thought I was through with you forever.  Since you’re not finished here, please help me cut him some slack.  He tries so hard and I allow my hormones to control me and I bitch at him for nothing. 

Ground rule #2 give the pill a chance again.  If you are going to show your bloody self just come during the time you are supposed to arrive.  Please don’t show up when I’m trying to work and can’t get to the bathroom. 

Ground rule #3 give me a chance to regulate my body again.  Walking is great, water is even better and I will do my best to incorporate meditation into my daily practice as that has taken a back seat.  I will give you a chance if you are patient with me.  Would you please give me your feedback? 

My Dearest Jaqueline,

I never intended to be such a bitch and bring up all this hostility in you.  I was and am here for a purpose and though you were unable to birth a child not due to me, only due to your mental illness I am still here to support you.  I have and always am a part of your inner self.  I thank you for acknowledging my existence and that you had a deep desire to rid of me.  My aim is not to bring harm, disdain or hate into your daily life.  My only goal is to keep regular and still produce hormones in your young active body. 

You are such a gift and you bless and touch all you come into contact with.  Please never feel inadequate because in your promiscuous years you prayed for me.  You did nothing wrong.  You are a brave, beautiful soul and the reason I’m a part of you is, Your Woman Strength.  Don’t ever feel embarrassed if I show up unannounced and confuse you with blood soaked jeans.  I’m not here to hurt you or keep you in fear from me.  I understand you want regularity from me.  That is a fair offer and I accept. 

Please keep that light in you shining.  Maybe something would have gone tragically wrong and your sugars being high are a way to protect you.  I don’t have the exact answer but I’m just as much a part of you as the light you bring forth every day.  So continue to shine on.  Continue to see me as your crimson red bloody bitch.  I’m not offended.  I hope you can someday see me as royalty, nobility, love and affection.  I will be here with you for a while and I will try my best to lay low and arrive every 21 days as instructed by your pill. 

Sincerely,

Your crimson red bloody bitch,

Period

         Dear Uterus,

         I thought this conversation would go in a different direction.  On July 7, 2021 I had a pulmonary embolism that my body implanted in my lungs.  Emergency room doctors said it was because of the birth control pill.  How convenient for you.  I thought I would be able to handle you.  Being off birth control pills and starting on blood thinners made things a bit messy to say the least.  My gynecologist inserted an IUD and said I may be good for five possibly six years.  One month later you again antagonized my body with cramping that I never experienced in all my years.  While trying to go pee it felt like a plug came out and I hemorrhaged. 

I ended up back in the emergency room for bleeding.  They could not locate the IUD after extensive testing including x-rays and an ultrasound.  I contacted my OBGYN and the next day started on progesterone.  I came off the blood thinners in September.  An entirely different set of conditions occurred being on this great drug that dried me up for three months.  My sugars sky rocketed and my hormones being out of whack was another nightmare.   

When I returned from a weekend retreat in January, I realized I was done with the progesterone and stopped.  My gynecologist informed me I would start my period two days after coming off.  Three weeks later you entered as fiercely and as determined as my mind was to rid of you in the first place.  I don’t understand how we made these ground rules and conditions that were crystal clear which you agreed to stick to, and you decide to show your bloody self like I have never experienced.  You bitch.  I will say I was prepared this time.  Pads that felt like a diaper I wore with success.  You didn’t stain my sheets or seep through clothing.  You are a nuisance and I still want you gone. 

May 13th, I have a scheduled date to finally have you removed from my body.  Since being off the progesterone I am starting to feel like a woman again.  My hormones are regulated and my sugars are normal.  My libido is in check and I can make love to my husband without any oil to assist with lubrication.  I know you must be feeling confused, irritated and lost that I will rid you once and for all from my body.  Would you please give me your feedback once again?

My Dearest Jaqueline,

Please know that I love you and will forever remain a part of your being even though you are having me removed.  I know you feel sad that you never gave “birth” to a baby and felt that movement in your belly.  You don’t have to menstruate to give birth.  You are giving birth to new ideas.  You are giving birth to new relationships in your life.  You are giving birth to your education and you are giving birth to your love for learning.  You are also giving birth to yourself by honoring what you need and what you love. 

Your desire and passion are as beautiful and uplifting as if a new baby was coming out of you right now.  Know you are always loved by me.  I will never hate you.  I will never harm you and I will take those fibroid cysts along with me when I go.  Please know the love in you is a beautiful gift to so many.  Please also know it’s ok that I am leaving.  It makes you no less of a woman that I am gone.  Shine on beautiful soul.  Shine bright.

Sincerely,

Your crimson red bloody bitch,

Period

A Window In Time by Victoria Moo Briddell

Now we turn inward to the quiet mind,

oasis of green in a vast expanse,

blown into dunes by a warm desert wind,

each grain of sand in its own special dance.

From the face of the Earth the thin veil slips,

our protection for eons is no more.    

Some fear the imminent apocalypse,

Earth has been treated as a common whore.

Where is the reverence for our Mother

who has cared for us through millennia?

To whom should we turn? There is no other.

How to rid mankind of this mania?

Our chances for recovery seem slim,

yet, She fills our cup again to the brim.

Victoria Moo Briddell was born and grew up in South Africa before emigrating to the United States. After graduation from San Francisco State University with a Bachelor of Arts degree, she taught English in Ecuador. She married Don Briddell in 1969 and together they travelled to India for further studies at the Yoga Vedanta Forest Academy of Sivananda Ashram, graduating with a Yoga Acharya degree in 1971.

She lives in Maryland where she and her husband run Overboard Art, Inc. She teaches Yoga in the Frederick area and participates in two Maryland writing groups as well as several writing workshops each year. She published her first book, “Looking Out from Within” – Living Yoga with the Saints and Sages of India (available on Amazon) in December 2018. She also loves gardening, reading, meditation, walking with friends and spending time with her children and grandchildren.

Fire by Robin Witmer-Kline

I dance upon the darkness

My beauty burns the night

My life is birthed from embers

In blackness….I am light

I leap and dance each time I rise

From my sprite-hearted rest

Balletic movements, yellow eyes

My ornaments from fe’st

My frenzy show of fury

In truth, I create calm

I pray upward to heaven

And touch God with my palms

I’m flaming ambidextrous

With prism heated hues

I soar to highest pinnacle

From orange, to red, to blue

I rage with haunting elegance

Inferno breathes me higher

When born of earthly elements

I am God-given fire

Dr. Robin Witmer-Kline, Ph.D., LPC, C-PD is a full-time Psychology Faculty member at Hagerstown Community College.She also is a licensed clinical psychotherapist and Certified Personality Disorder clinician in the state of Pennsylvania with over 25 years clinical and teaching experience.Dr. Witmer-Kline earned her Ph.D. in Clinical Christian Psychology and combined her faith and her love of psychology and poetry for her dissertation in which she examined poetry therapy and faith’s effects on reminiscence, mood, cognition, and self-esteem in the elderly.She lives in Greencastle, Pennsylvania with her husband and family.

Thoughts Of Me by Robin Witmer-Kline

Once earth has pressed against my lips

And veiled my eyes sublime

Will face, or speech, or scented skin

Bring thoughts of me to mind

Will every there be thoughts of me,

That pause your steps awhile?

And search your mind, so thoroughly

To reconstruct my smile.

Dr. Robin Witmer-Kline, Ph.D., LPC, C-PD is a full-time Psychology Faculty member at Hagerstown Community College.She also is a licensed clinical psychotherapist and Certified Personality Disorder clinician in the state of Pennsylvania with over 25 years clinical and teaching experience.Dr. Witmer-Kline earned her Ph.D. in Clinical Christian Psychology and combined her faith and her love of psychology and poetry for her dissertation in which she examined poetry therapy and faith’s effects on reminiscence, mood, cognition, and self-esteem in the elderly.She lives in Greencastle, Pennsylvania with her husband and family.

Fifteen Things My Granddaughter Should Know About Makeup by Sandra Inskeep-Fox

My mother, known in the family as Grandmother Doris, was a beautiful woman; petite but well-proportioned, coal black hair and green eyes. She could smile and light one’s heart up for a day. She liked being pretty, I think, but she was too busy just surviving to improve much on what she was born with and she never trusted it as an asset to build her life around. It got her into more trouble than she bargained for earlier in her life though she never talked about that to anyone. For very special occasions which were few in number she had a stick of pancake makeup from Merle Norman’s and a tube of whatever lipstick her budget could afford, always red.  She kept these in the medicine cabinet on the top shelf. She couldn’t reach the top shelf without standing on the toilet but she didn’t need to makeup often so this was no problem.  She worked in a textile mill sewing blankets all day, the wool tore at her nails and dried out her cuticles,  So she also had a manicure kit and some hand cream, not strictly make-up, but she did add nail polish to the weekly routine, very expertly polishing around the moons of her nails as was the fashion then. All these accoutrements she kept on her dressing table. When the Avon Lady came by on Saturdays she’d invite her in and look at the catalog while they talked. All she ever ordered though was more red nail polish.

In those days the two ends of the spectrum of beauty were movie stars and women who had “let themselves go” after they got a wedding ring. The movie stars with their ruby red lips and lusciously long, curly hair looked like goddesses even in jungle scenes or riding down the dusty trails of the westerns. The women who were letting themselves go were beyond the pale…they were known to wander the streets in curlers, go to church with trousers under trench coats, answer the door in their slips.  Mom would say if I ever even thought of such a thing she’d make sure my life was not worth the living of it.

We didn’t have UTube. (Yes, I saw you checking it out to see the right way to put a finish on lipstick.) We had Seventeen Magazine with rather obtuse directions for applying lipstick but that was about as much as we learned from “reliable” sources. Those models used pink lipstick, the color of innocence and the only acceptable color for, well, seventeen year-olds. I didn’t get an allowance, but if I did any babysitting an hour’s worth could just buy a tube of Tangee lipstick. I couldn’t wear it to school though so, really, why bother. Once babysitting I found a copy of True Romance with an ad for mascara. I got the idea to try what I thought would be a substitute. I waited and when Mom was gone I lit a match from the kitchen stove, blew it out and applied its black over my lashes. Yum. I’ve never felt so gorgeous since…and I never had the nerve to try it with Mom around.

I was nearly the magic age of seventeen before I noticed that all my friends and schoolmates were leaning toward the Goddess side of the equation. If they weren’t leaning that way they were being pushed by moms who had more time to worry about popularity and proms and stuff than mine did. I was self-conscious to the extreme, and rather abundantly proportioned myself. I didn’t dare try the movie star routine. Already the other mothers were tsk-tsking when they looked at me. Somehow I had to find a happy medium between goddess and god-awful.  I didn’t have any sisters or girl cousins or even any precocious friends I could learn from, I didn’t have the right questions anyway.  I did what I always did in every trying situation. I went to the library.  I learned all about lipsticks, rouge, moisturizers, Clearasil for zits, powders, eyebrow plucking, eye shadow, underarm shaving, ratting my hair, everything. Eventually I tried it all, moderately successful. I even taught Mom a thing or two along the way. Here’s what I learned about make-up:

1. It’s fun.

2. It costs money.        

3. The costs increase over time.

4. The time it takes takes longer every year.

5. If it takes longer than 10 minutes a day, its benefits reach a diminishing return on the first two items above.

6. There will be days that are not worth the make-up. Maybe more than you think.

7. If you are made up, you are made up. The mask that you wear may define the role you play, not who you are.

8. If you put the mask on early it will take longer to figure out who you are.

9. If you use make up regularly before long you may begin to believe you are ugly without it.

10.  When you wear makeup you will have to work twice as hard or be twice as smart to be seen as a serious person.  Not fair, but then that’s the way it is for women.

11.   You will never look perfectly good or perfectly beautiful.

12.  You will never look as good as you think you do, or for that matter as bad either.

13.  If you did look too good or too perfect you would only be a target, something to aim at, not for.

14.  The effects of makeup (other than on your own psyche) are extremely time-limited.15.  You are beautiful without it, too.

Sandra Inskeep-Fox is a poet, an independent scholar and co-owner of Dorley House books in Clear Spring, Maryland.  Sandra writes poetry, short stories, essays, and keeps voluminous journals. She has been published in the Chaffin Review, Facet, Cimarron Review, Commonweal Magazine, The Big Two-Hearted Review, the Aurorean, the Virginia Woolf Miscellany and others.  She won several contests, including the 1st annual Marquette Monthly Short Story contest, and received Honorable mention in the Best of Ohio writers contests in 2001, 2004 and 2005. She is currently working to complete a manuscript on the creative process of Virginia Woolf and a manuscript of her own Bloomsbury-inspired poetry.

Guilty, Mondays by Sandra Inskeep-Fox

I guess Methodist you could say,

struggling to remember more

than echoes of crowded church basements

& Jesus Loves Me & flannel-

board stories told by high-voiced pious cousins

and black-veiled made-up aunts

who always dusted their chairs before sitting down.

.

& Grandma’s—on Monday, the wash; Tuesday,

the ironing (two whole days attending to

maintenance of a meager cache of

linens and clothing, each piece handled

to last, mended when it seemed tempted

to fray away); Wednesdays, the baking, bread

and pies of whatever fruits were in season;

Thursdays, groceries, a trek to the Red & White; Fridays,

cleaning for whatever company might show; Saturdays

the odds & ends of tasks & maybe a trip to town;

and Sundays again

with the old ladies in the cold, damp suspicions

of basement rooms. Everyday there were other

things too, but set within an order…methodically,

& the men out there somewhere doing whatever

men do, and coming home on time for meals

and naps, and always seeing that the women

had a ride to and from church on Wednesdays

& Sundays & feeling saved themselves doing

their duties so regularly

.

& Mom in a factory, day in day out; life unorganized,

guilty Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, guilty

Thursday, Friday & Saturday, and especially guilty

Sunday & no man

to drive her to and from

.

So, yes, I guess you’d say Methodist.

At least that’s what I most

remember.

Sandra Inskeep-Fox is a poet, an independent scholar and co-owner of Dorley House books in Clear Spring, Maryland.  Sandra writes poetry, short stories, essays, and keeps voluminous journals. She has been published in the Chaffin Review, Facet, Cimarron Review, Commonweal Magazine, The Big Two-Hearted Review, the Aurorean, the Virginia Woolf Miscellany and others.  She won several contests, including the 1st annual Marquette Monthly Short Story contest, and received Honorable mention in the Best of Ohio writers contests in 2001, 2004 and 2005. She is currently working to complete a manuscript on the creative process of Virginia Woolf and a manuscript of her own Bloomsbury-inspired poetry.

Early At The Pool by Sandra Inskeep-Fox

Old ladies lugging coffee mugs,

Books, lotions, phones,

Bundles of papers,

Come early to the pool.

Fabulous flopping hats shading

Faces: wrinkled, grooved, smiling.

They recognize each other, a certain sisterhood

Of easy hello-ing,

A common inclination to come together here before the crowd

Staking out preferences, arranging belongings, claiming

Some unencumbered space of sun.

.

Nora Ephron said hair dye

Changed everything for women,

50 now the new 30

Means L’Oreal would set me back

More than $16.50

As I wonder through this sisterhood

Of colorful, fading shadows.

.

Lord knows where our families are,

Still sleeping perhaps,

Husbands on patios engrossed in the morning news or maybe

No longer even alive to this glaring, golden day;

Daughters now middle-aged, themselves groggy with the day

And only just behind them.

Nubile granddaughters with their incessant “I’m like”

Me, me, me all day, everyday.

.

We come to the pool early,

The flotsam rubbish

Of other lives strewn on the ocean’s craters

Between this pool and the first time we

Skinny-dipped in that long-ago cool, green lake.

Alone with each other we relax, stroke lotions

Over the atlas of well-traveled bodies, and stretch out

In the early sunlight,

Shielded  under these great flopping hats of hope,

Flaunting what we have

Before, in the slim and agile presence

Of the young,

we vanish into cooler shadows.

Sandra Inskeep-Fox is a poet, an independent scholar and co-owner of Dorley House books in Clear Spring, Maryland.  Sandra writes poetry, short stories, essays, and keeps voluminous journals. She has been published in the Chaffin Review, Facet, Cimarron Review, Commonweal Magazine, The Big Two-Hearted Review, the Aurorean, the Virginia Woolf Miscellany and others.  She won several contests, including the 1st annual Marquette Monthly Short Story contest, and received Honorable mention in the Best of Ohio writers contests in 2001, 2004 and 2005. She is currently working to complete a manuscript on the creative process of Virginia Woolf and a manuscript of her own Bloomsbury-inspired poetry.

Stones by Eric Schwartz

(for mom)

I see you in the distance, moving along the curve

That Lake Superior has carved from the land.

I hear only the endless succession of waves lapping

And the constant wind rushing. I see no one else

On the beach but you, walking away from me,

Walking, head down, looking at the rocks smoothed

By millennia on the beach. You stop from time

To time, pick up one of these rocks, turn it

In your hand, examine it more closely, and

If you like this find, you put it in the plastic

Jug you carry. We are collecting stones.

Supposedly, we are looking for agates or

Greenstones to polish later. But really

we are just collecting pretty stones.

And more importantly,

We are just walking on the beach.

.

Years later, when you are in the house where you will die,

I rummage through the detritus of your life, the collected stuff

That seems as endless as the waves that lap upon the shore.

In the hallway to the garage cramped by collected bottles,

Broken appliances, and trash bags, I find a plastic jug filled

With pretty stones, some agates, all no more polished

Than the day you picked them up

And we walked the beach together.

Eric Schwartz has been teaching political science and other subjects at Hagerstown Community College since 2012. Prior to college teaching, he was a newspaper reporter and editor for about 20 years, working mainly in the northeast USA. He now lives with his wife, Margaret Yaukey, in Williamsport, MD.