Expressive Domain

Poetry of Patricia A. Hawkenson, Expressive Domain is a close look at life.


10/23/09 Patricia A. Hawkenson’s Reflections – Like Nobody’s Business – I Have Used Up My Allotment of Pixie Dust

Like Nobody’s Business

She could blame the caffeine
or the thousand and one
details and unmade decisions
that follow her
home from work
waking her up
at 3:07 to throw off
covers and expectations
of a good night’s sleep,
but she doesn’t.

She just stumbles
to the bathroom,
closing her eyes again
to the glare of the light,
only a sliver
squeezing through
while cupping her hands
trying to sip enough
to swallow an aspirin.

She lay back down,
dreams beginning
to slide again
into distorted cubicles
and his accusation
that work
is
her life.

When the alarm finally rings,
its sharpness
reawakens that throbbing headache,
and she finds only a dribble
of relief
rolling onto the coolness
of his side of the sheet.

She could blame him
for her pain
and her thirst,

but she doesn’t,

faulting only her skillful fingers,

unable to catch water

or men.

I Have Used Up My Allotment of Pixie Dust

Talking frogs
and levitating children
danced with mushrooms
in my imagination.

Fanciful sojourns
to mystical places
could hold me
spell bound
for hours at a time.

Then I grew
too busy for books,
my hands caught up
in other tasks.

Untethered,
I have flown
into the place
where exertion
and exhaustion
collide.

If a floating lady
with a sparkling wand
wants to make me
sleep for a thousand years,

then let her.

6/02/09 Patricia A. Hawkenson’s Reflections

The Truth of Patricia Anne

Edith Ann sat in her oversized rocker
with a room full of toys
that she never played with
and thought great thoughts
about what was true.
And that’s the truth.

She was young but had wisdom
that she gained from seeing the world
alone from her high chair
while other children watched her
and played with their toys.
And that’s the truth.

I have spent a lot of time
impressing my friends
by what I know
and they say they look up to me,
because I have figured out
a few things out on my own.
And that’s the truth.

I can honestly say
that I never asked them
to put me up on a pedestal
so they can admire me
but they did.
And that’s the truth.

But they should know
that it is lonely,
so lonely
here at the top
where I work to learn
and watch you play.
And that’s the truth.

Edith Ann and I have discovered
the same universal knowledge.
All work and no play
isn’t as fun as people might think.
We may be wise and witty
but it’s no laughing matter.
And that’s the truth.