elegy: a poem of serious reflection, typically a lament for the dead
Remember how she smoked too many cigarettes, flicking them one after another into the cold street? Standing there for hours under the streetlights, breath and smoke locked together like the blue and silver holiday wreath she found at the Thrift-a-Lot and carried through two husbands, one apartment, and a house. She once got top marks in typing but then failed out of business school because she took up with a beautifully broken man who kept her up too late and drove her to class each morning, swerving through patches of black ice, motorcycle tires spitting snow onto her stolen white jacket. I've always wondered why she never had warmer jackets. I've always wondered why she stayed so long. She couldn't leave because Wednesday was ladies night. She knew all the jukebox numbers by heart and made a habit of going home with the wrong man. Remember how she never cried but could take a punch and give it right back, how she spoke in circles and shouted until the sun came up? She once said her life was an afterschool special with tired country music blaring in the background and she wasn't smiling. Remember how we put her to rest in that record breaking blizzard? How nothing seemed real anymore and the snow was soft feathers against the windshield? The road led west and it turned out that she could have rescued herself all along. May she rest in peace.
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Who am I?I’m a systems engineer and creative coach living in ABQ, NM. I believe that we can intentionally design our lives to align with our deepest dreams and desires. Archives
January 2023
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