Tag Archive | apology

12/20/2012 – Patricia A. Hawkenson’s Reflections – Writer’s Digest TOP 25!

I am VERY PROUD to announce that my poem ‘Plum Crazy’ was listed in the TOP 25 poems during the 2012 Poetic Aside’s April PAD Challenge! (Hundreds of poets and thousands of submissions!)

Plum Crazy

William Carlos Williams
was lucky.

He had a forgiving partner
who was able to imagine
the delicious, sweet
and so cold plums
and settle for flakes
that probably weren’t so
forgiving
and quickly limped
into a soggy mess.

And even though
his apology was so
cleverly written that it is still
read and reread
long after iceboxes
have turned into Frigidaire’s,

I would have smacked him
with a frozen leg of lamb.

Forgive me,
I am so cold.

9/19/09 Patricia A. Hawkenson’s Reflections

10, 11, All Good Girls Go to Heaven

If she had been good
at taking advice
she would have listened to me.

But she lacked that skill,
and a few others.
He would count them
one-by-one
until she started pouring
pills faster than liquor.

Only her pharmacist knows
how much she loved him
by the number of pills
he counted two-by-two
into a bottle labeled
with his urgent warnings.

She is now an expert
of out-of-body experiences,
taking her away
where abused women live,
black veils covering
one-and-all,
a side effect of love.

Sticky Business

Post it notes scribbled with necessities
cluttered his desktop
and spilled over to his fridge
until he was connected
by minute threads of paper fiber
pressing their collected
importance into the back of his neck
where his repeated rubbing
could not erase.

She made the mistake
of moving THE note
off the mirror so she could apply
a tempting slather of rose red lipstick
and was admonished
with a collected list
of important reminders
of just how necessary
his paper trail was.

But then he saw
the litter of her femininity,
her trailing shoes and brushes,
her nylons and earrings,
her lingering lavender perfume,
had been carefully packed
and abruptly removed.

He posted another note
written in pen
so as not to erase:

Apologize.

8/24/09 Patricia A. Hawkenson’s Reflections

I Cry When I Cut Onions

The snow began softly.
I’m not sure if I can remember
when one flake landed alone.
Then it became crystal clear
as I watched the ground morph
thick into the white of the sky.

You came up behind me
putting a jacket over my sweater,
a gesture of kindness
before everything snowballed.
It was meant as an apology
to block out the cold words
that were landing thick and staying
as long as winter.

But my brothers taught me
to pack a snowball hard with ice
chucking it to cut on contact
while I dress in layers
staying soft and warm.