Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Dead Muse Challenge #2

My second entry for The Dead Muse Challenge.

Every year, twice a year, for as long as I could remember, the gypsies would pass through our town on their way to God only knew where, and they would stop and make camp for a couple of days at the edge of the woods. It had become almost an event when they passed through, the wooden wheels of their wagons rumbling over the cobblestone street of old downtown while their horses' hooves clomped musically along. Everyone would gather in the small stores, using the ruse of shopping when they were really there to get a glimpse of the colorful wagons as they passed. You could hear them as they rolled down the street, and everyone would spill out onto the sidewalks to watch them pass. Even the people who'd lived in town all of their 80-plus years would still gawk in fascination as the gypsies rolled past.



My momma would say every year that it "just ain't Christian to gawk at the poor heathens." Yet every year, we'd hustle downtown to join the others. We'd roam from shop to shop as Momma half-heartedly looked at what was offered on the shelves of each store, just waiting for that familiar rumble from down the street. Momma would quickly scoot us out the door where we would stand near Mrs. Browning or one of the other women we knew. I could feel Momma's hand squeeze my shoulder just a bit tighter as the wagons passed, as if she was afraid one of the gypsies would snatch me from her right there in the middle of town.



As much as Momma was fascinated by the gypsies, she was more frightened of them. Until the 10 or so painted wagons left town, we were forbidden to go anywhere alone or even play outside unless it was just in the front yard. And so every year, twice a year, our lives changed for those few days. Whereas I normally could walk to my friend Jenny's house to play or Hansen's Ice Cream Shop in the summer for a cone, or even ride my bike up and down our street with the other neighborhood children, I was forced to stay just in our front yard, always in plain sight, so Momma could look out the kitchen window and easily see me.

And absolutely the woods was forbidden during those gypsy days. Where normally I was allowed to wander to the woods and, as long as I stayed within the first five feet or so, I could even make my way into the woods and search for treasures. I loved to look for interesting leaves, small strange rocks, acorns, and other items I could fill my pockets with to take home and look through. But not during the days the gypsies were there. And I really missed my time in the woods.

For years, I honored my mother's wishes about staying away from the gypsies. I was the good, obedient girl. It wasn't until that summer that I turned 15 that I broke that. It was late June, and we had been out of school for a couple of weeks. I had spent my time with my friends, running wild with the ones my age, and even venturing out with my few friends who were older than me and already driving. I was still on that strange cusp between being a little girl catching fireflies in jars and being a young woman on her first date at the drive in.

That strange Saturday when the gypsy wagons rolled through downtown, I was sitting at the lunch counter of the pharmacy with Belle Ann, Georgia and Phyllis, my three best friends in the world. We were talking about the boys we liked and wondering what it would be like when we got our first kiss. Suddenly, people began exiting to the sidewalk to watch the wagons pass, and so we followed, gathering together near a lamppost.



As the lead wagon passed me, an old woman I recognized from years past looked directly at me. Her eyes locked with mine, and it seemed like she could stare into my soul. I felt so uncomfortable, almost violated. Her thin, crackled lips curled upward slightly, almost in a smile, as her eyebrows raised just a touch. It looked as if she nodded at me subtly, a knowing nod that chilled me. I looked down, breaking the electric current of a gaze between us. 



I suddenly felt more uncomfortable than curious, so I turned and went back to my seat at the lunchcounter and waited for my friends to return. "Where did you go?" they asked as they returned. I just shook my head and made an excuse about the sun making me feel dizzy.

That evening, no matter how hard I tried, I could not push that look from my mind...the old woman's eyes boring into my soul like the huge bits that drilled into the earth's surface searching for oil on the mountains nearby. I closed my eyes as tight as I could, read a book, played cards with my sister. Nothing helped, though. Finally, with a knot of something akin to dread in the pit of my stomach, I went to bed and curled up under the sheet, my window open so the slight breeze could hit my face during the night.

My sleep was fitful, though. Most of the night I spent tossing and turning, unable to relax enough to sleep. When I was finally able to drift off, though, I was haunted by the old woman's eyes in my dreams. I got up early the next morning, exhausted from a night of not sleeping. I washed my face in hopes to perk up a bit before heading to church then to Penelope's house for a youth mixer.

That evening, as the whole family sat on the front porch in the dying light, silence and the songs of crickets the only sounds, I heard a low, soft, mournful sound begin from the woods, slow and low. Soon, the song rose in volume and tempo, and I couldn't help but turn my gaze toward the woods from whence the music came. Over the next rooftop, against the tops of the tall trees, I could see the orange-red, flickering glow of a fire. The gypsies. Many times had I heard about how they would light large bonfires then dance madly around, singing, chanting, and doing whatever other "heathen" things gypsies did.

That night and the following were both as fitful as Saturday's sleep had been. Every moment I had slept had been filled with visions of gypsy women and men dancing wildly around a huge fire; the old woman's eyes peering into my soul. Tuesday afternoon I couldn't bear it any longer and had to satisy my curiosity about the unusual clan camped out at the edge of our woods. I snuck away, making an excuse about meeting friends in town to Momma on my way out the door.

Quickly I half-walked, half-ran down the sidewalk, turning onto Jasper Street, then on to Elm which would take me right to the woods. In about 10 minutes I would be able to sidle along the back wall of Edgar's Store and spy on the gypsy camp. As I thought about it, my heart raced faster and my steps quickened. I was giddy with anticipation and dread, wondering what these strange people would be doing when I arrived, what their camp looked like, and if I could get close enough to hear them even.

Slowly I rounded the corner of the store and there it was, the gypsy camp. My breath caught in my throat as I took it in. Ten or so brightly painted wagons were in a semi-circle, their doorways facing the center where a firepit had been set up. Over the fire, smoldering low, was a pot set upon a grate and a spit with a couple of animal carcasses on it, roasting slowly over the heat. Men and women moved around the camp, doing chores of the day, talking softly, or even napping in the shade of the trees overhead. My eyes raked over the camp, absorbing every detail I could as quickly as I could.

It was in a heartbeat of a moment, though, when my excitement turned to dread. There she was, standing at the edge of the fire, looking straight at me, those eyes peering into me once again. Her weathered, wrinkled face without expression for a moment, then her eyes crinkling at the corners as she smiled. Her withered right hand, gnarled with age, raised slightly as she crooked her finger and motioned for me to come closer. Although my blood ran cold, I couldn't help but move toward her, my eyes locked on hers as my cheeks flushed.

As if her finger tugged a string that pulled me closer, I moved forward, past the men sharpening axes, past the women washing laundry, even past the boisterous children playing tag. I stood in the center of the camp, just 6 feet away from this woman who had haunted my dreams for so many nights now. She took two steps toward me and reached out, wrapping her hand around my wrist, pulling me closer.

"You want I should read for you, no?" her raspy voice almost cooed to me. Her smile returned, but where it once looked almost sinister and cold, it was now warmer, more welcoming. If only it would calm the butterflies dancing in the pit of my stomach. She tugged at my wrist, pulling me with her as she turned and walked toward one of the wagons. I could see over her stooped shoulder a table with two chairs was sitting in the grass, and on the table was the oddest set of cards I had ever seen. "Come, I read for you," she cooed again. "I tell your future. Just $20."




I blinked, unsure if I heard her correctly. My future? She could see my future? I looked from the table to her face, then back to the table again. The cards spread on it had the most odd pictures I had seen, and none of them had numbers that I could tell. I wondered what kind of game she played with the cards as she pulled me closer to the table. She pulled me to one of the chairs as I continued to examine the funny cards before me. She spun, sprightly for someone of her seemed age, and sat across from me in the opposite chair then held out her hand. I looked down at it then back to her eyes. They seemed to beckon to me to take the chance.

I had saved my money from babysitting all school year: That $38.43 was going to be a nice payment on a car next fall. But before I realized what I was doing, my hand slid into my pocket, grabbed my money, took it out and pushed it into her hand. She smiled in return, looked down at the $20 bill in her hand, laid it on the table, then picked up her special cards.

Her hands, gnarled with time and age, deftly began shuffling the cards before she dealt them into neat little piles on the table before us. Each stack was topped with a card, face-up, and with each she flipped like this, she made a small noise deep in her throat. Sometimes the noise sounded soft, like the purr of a kitten or the coo of a dove. Other times, her noises were gutteral, like a low growl, and made me nervous.



Slowly she flipped through the cards, studying them, moving and adjusting their placement from time to time. After a while, she stopped and looked up at me. Her eyes were glistening and looked so deep I thought I could fall into them. It felt like my heart and breath halted as she looked at me.



"Young lady, you have much to offer, yet you hide your true self," she began, her voice raspy and soft. "Someone, a woman, holds you back, you think. She does not, though. No. You hold yourself back. You are scared of yourself and do not know what to do.

"You must trust the heart inside you. Listen to its beating. It tells truth to you. Yours will be a long, hard road if you do not listen to your heart."

She then placed her hand over mine. Her skin was ice cold, but soon warmed as she moved my hand over the table. Our hands, together, hovered over one of the cards.

"This shows that you are smart," she said. "You know much, but you use it little."

She moved my hand with hers until they hovered together over another card, placed crossways over one of her stacks. Gently she pressed my hand downward until the palm lay flat on the card's face, her own hand blanketing mine.

"See this? This means you are lucky in love," she continued, her voice lowering just a bit. "Yet because you trust not yourself, you can trust no other. Until you trust yourself, you will always have a broken heart."

On and on, she outlined my personality to me, speaking soft and low, her voice at once raspy and frightening, then turning sweet and gentle. Time and again, each stack of cards held the same message for me: I had to learn to trust myself, or I would not enjoy my life completely. I must gain courage in myself, or I would always be scared. I must rely on what my heart told me to do, or I would always feel lost.



Finally, with a slight nod, she released my hand, then patted the back of it gently.

"Now you go. Hear what I said. Listen to my words," she said. "You are a good girl. You have much. You just need to see it."

I paused, wondering if I was really free to go. Slowly, though, I lifted myself from the chair, turned, and began walking away, my legs wobbly and my head spinning. I glanced back over my shoulder, but the old woman was gone. All that was left were her funny cards on the table.

That evening, I guess I was unusually quiet because both my momma and daddy asked me several times if I was feeling alright. Momma even leaned over and pressed her hand to my forehead, checking me for fever. I assured her I was fine, just tired, and I suppose they eventually believed me, because they quit asking me how I felt.

That night, though, as I laid on my bed, I thought I could hear a gypsy tune in the song of the crickets and the old woman's voice in the wind: "Trust the heart inside you. It tells truth to you..."

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

{EPS} Creative Writing - Journal #4

Free write!

Skippy ran as fast as she could through the tall grass in the field behind her house. She loved the feeling of the wind against her face and the freedom she felt when she could just break free and make her muscles work until they burned. She could see home in the distance, so streaked toward it, running faster and faster the closer she got. Abruptly the tall fieldgrass became the short, close cut lawn of home, and she slowed, panting for breath as her heart beat so hard inside her chest, she could hear it in her ears.

She wandered to the old apple tree and flopped to the ground beneath it, fully in the shade of the giant. She stretched slowly, her muscles still tingling from the free, frantic running, and laid down in the grass, the cool breeze ruffling her golden locks gently. She sighed deeply and closed her eyes, sniffing the clean, crisp summer air and enjoying the feeling of her home.

Just as she began to drift to sleep, she heard a car door slam shut, and her head popped up. "Jake is home!" she thought as she sprang to her feet. In mere seconds, she was in a sprint again, dashing through the backyard, around the clothesline, past the small garden, and around the east side of the house. As soon as she turned the second corner, she saw him. He had walked from his car to the mailbox, but was already strolling back up the driveway toward the house, humming soflty as he flipped through the bills and junk mail from that day's delivery.

He looked up and when his eyes met hers, his mouth stretched wide into a smile, which only made her run faster, harder, to him. "Come 'ere girl! That's it!" Jake chimed as Skippy leaped up on her hind legs, her front paws panted squarely on his broad chest. He chuckled as he scratched her behind the ears, patting her side with his other hand. "That's my good girl," he cooed to her. "Yes, that's my love."

{EPS} Creative Writing - Jumble Story

Students named 4 numbers, each to which a setting, character, place and situation were assigned.

Character:  a recent high school graduate
Setting:  the porch of an old farmhouse
Time:  sometime in December
Situation:  someone feels like giving up

JennyLee couldn't believe she had already been out of high school for seven months now. She nudged the floor of the porch with her toes, making the swing sway forward and back slowly and rhythmically. She closed her eyes and laid her head back, hugging herself tightly, trying to fight off the bite of the winter air. She took a deep breath and exhaled slowly, her body relaxing as she did.

The day after graduation she had come to see her Grammy. It had been far too long since she had been here. It seemed just yesterday that she was young and spent every summer with Grammy and Poppy in their old farmhouse in the Kansas prairies. She loved visiting. Grammy and Poppy would spoil her shamelessly, though they had their own way of getting her to help with chores around the farm.

It had been four or five years since those days, though. As she hit her teenage years, she lost her appreciation for her grandparents. She would have much rathered hang out with her friends and swoon over boys in her classes. She kept in touch with Grammy and Poppy of course, and she would see them at Thanksgiving and Christmas every year.

Poppy passed away shortly after JennyLee graduated though, and she was shocked into the realization that her grandparents wouldn't always be there. Shortly after, she packed up most of her clothes and cosmetics, a few books and CDs, and Franklin, the teddy bear Grammy gave her for her 8th birthday. She loaded it all into the car her dad bought her for graduation, and took off to Kansas. She;d been here ever since, enjoying her time with Grammy, helping her around the house and just spending time with her, talking and learning from her.

Christmas was coming soon, though, and the pair of ladies had decorated the old family farmhouse to the nines, decking every hall and hanging every decoration they could find. JennyLee smiled to herself as she thought about it. She loved Christmas and the time with family it brought. As she daydreamed, imagining how this year's Christmas would be, she couldn't help but frown.

Grammy had changed since JennyLee was a little kid. She had always been so cheerful and happy, optimistic and the one everyone turned to for help and counsel. Not anymore, though. She seemed tired, JennyLee thought, more tired that she had ever seen Grammy. She moved slower, talked slower, did less, and most noticably, smiled less. JennyLee's frown deepened as she stood from the swing and gathered the blanket around her, then went inside.

The warmth and glow from the fireplace lifted JennyLee's spirits for a moment. She had always loved a flickering flame to sit in front of. Quickly, though, her thoughts returned to her Grammy. She tossed the blanket onto the couch as she passed through the living room and made her way into the kitchen where she found Grammy at the counter, stirring something sweet-smelling in a huge glass bowl. JennyLee stopped and watched Grammy for a few moments, examing the faded blue eyes, the creases around her eyes and mouth, the slight frown on her face. Grammy looked so sad.

JennyLee walked to Grammy and hugged her suddenly, clinging to her tightly. Grammy stopped her task and put her hands over JennyLee's and rubbed them softly. "Babygirl, what's wrong? Is everything ok?"

JennyLee took a deep breath and pulled away from Grammy slowly, letting the elder woman turn to face her granddaughter. She looked Grammy in the eye and her mind raced, trying to decide how to phrase her thoughts. "Grammy, I am worried about you. I don't want you to take this the wrong way, but you're so different. It worries me. Are you sick or something?"

Grammy shook her head slowly and looked down. Wearily she lifted her hand to her face, covering her eyes as her shoulders slumped. With a heavy sigh she looked up again and smiled weakly at JennyLee. "Oh, babygirl. I am so sorry you've been worrying. I wish you had come to me earlier.
"To tell the truth, I'm lonely. I miss your Poppy. I don't know how to live without him. Oh, I don't want to burden you with this. You're too young and should be carefree," Grammy lifted her hand to brush JennyLee's cheek softly.

JennyLee held Grammy's hand, leaning her cheek into the weathered hand, then she gently tugged Grammy's hand, guiding her to the table. The pair sat next to each other, still holding hands, as JennyLee said, "Grammy, you're one of my best friends. You can tell me anything. I promise."

Grammy sighed again heavily, as if she had the weight of the world on her shoulders. JennyLee could see the tears form in Grammy's eyes as they began to turn red. With a weak, shuddering voice she began. "Honey, this is going to be hard for you to understand, and that isn't your fault. It's just that you're so young and have so much ahead of you. But when you've spent 57 years with someone, waking up with them, eating with them, shopping with them, going to bed with them...well, when they're gone, there's just a hole there, and you don't know what to do to fill it.

"Losing your Poppy has made me realize that I'm at the end of my life. And now that I don't have him to spend the rest of my life with, I guess I'm just tired. I don't have anything to look forward to each day. I feel a little bit like I just wanna give up."

"Oh Grammy!" JennyLee sprung from her seat and embraced her Grammy tightly. "Please don't say that Grammy! Please! I can't even imagine what my life would be like without you! Please don't talk like that!"

JennyLee began to weep softly as Grammy pulled her into her lap, snuggling her like when she was a little girl. Softly the two women rocked gently, both weeping for their own reasons, clinging to one another as if holding on to dear life itself.

"Babygirl, I am so sorry. I didn't want to worry you or burden you," Grammy said. "It's ok. I promise everything will be ok. I just miss your Poppy is all. Especially now with Christmas 'round the corner. All I can think about is your Poppy lugging the Christmas tree up the steps and everyone coming together. It just makes me sad that he's not here for it."

JennyLee kissed her Grammy's cheek softly and slid from her lap to kneel on the floor at Grammy's feet, her hands grasping Grammy's in her lap. She looked up and with her voice full of love, JennyLee whispered, "Grammy, I love you so much. And I've been thinking about it since I came to visit. If it's ok with you, I'd really like to move in here with you. I could find a job in town and take some college classes online. You wouldn't be lonely, and I could help you out around the house. We could do so much together! I want you to teach me how to quilt, and I have always dreamed of helping you in your garden again, like when I was little.

"Oh Grammy, please say I can come live with you."

Grammy's eye flooded with tears as she leaned down quickly to pull her granddaughter to her. She squeezed her tightly and rubbed her back. "Oh honey, I can't imagine anything I would love more!"

That Christmas was one of the best the family had had. And although Poppy's chair sat empty through the revelry, JennyLee, Grammy and the rest of the family used the time together to plan get-togethers, family vacations, and Grammy and JennyLee's future. For several Christmases to follow, the family gathered in the old farmhouse. Springtime always found them spending a week in the mountains; the beach was a favorite vacation spot for them all in summer; and trips to camp in the forest were how they spent a week each fall.

When Grammy's time to join Poppy came, many, many years later, she left the old farmhouse to JennyLee. Determined to honor and uphold her grandparents' legacy, she welcoed her family back each year at Christmas, and without realizing it, they always left Grammy and Poppy's favorite chairs empty, as if the couple would join them for their celebrations.

Monday, June 25, 2012

{EPS} Creative Writing - The story behind the music

Assignment: Listen to the following song then write a story inspired by it.



Little Jenny still has to have her mommy's help to tie the ribbons on her favorite pink ballet shoes, but she knows one day, she'll be able to tie them herself. Until then, Mommy helps her tie them snug so she can dance and not worry about them slipping.

Mommy usually dances with her in their home studio. Mommy always looks so pretty in her black leotard and black satin pointe shoes. Jenny usually wears her pink leotard so it matches her favorite pink shoes. Together they spin and sway to the music box Jenny's Daddy sent to her Mommy from overseas.

Jenny remembers the day it arrived, the box wrapped in brown paper, so plain looking. But inside, oh! Jenny's breath caught as Mommy pulled from that plain old box another box wrapped in pink paper and tied with a big red bow. Daddy was away at war, but while he was gone, he never forgot his girls back home. He always sent them each something on special occasions.

This time it was Mommy's birthday. When she unwrapped the pretty package, they both ooo'ed and ahhh'ed over the music box. It was white ivory inlaid with mother-of-pearl and some other stones Jenny couldn't pronounce. On the lid was a picture of a rose on a royal blue background. It was probably the prettiest thing Jenny ever saw.

When Mommy opened the lid, the beautiful music filled the air. For a moment they just sat and listened to it together. Soon Mommy set it on the table, though, and stood to take Jenny in her arms. She swung them both around in time to the music, Jenny's head laying back as she giggled.

From that day on, they would don their ballet shoes and danced together to the box's music. Mommy would show Jenny the steps she remembered from her girlhood days of ballet classes. Jenny would do her best to mimic exactly what Mommy had done.

Sometimes the pretty music made Jenny sad, though. You see, just two days after Mommy got the pretty box with the rose on top, two men came to the front door. When Mommy opened it and saw them, she began crying, but Jenny didn't know why. Later that night, her Mimi explained to Jenny that her Daddy had died in the war. He was a hero, Mimi said.

That music never sounded as sweet anymore. But Jenny and her Mommy danced together anyway.

{EPS} Creative Writing - Journal #3

Prompt: Write a short story about me, Miss Kennedy, being attacked by a pair of strange, flying, black bugs.

The two black bugs zoomed out from behind the blinds suddenly. I had been trying to kill them all day, throwing three shoes, a remote control, a rolled up newspaper and even my purse at them as they flitted around the room, dancing a strange bug ballet in the air. I really thought I had killed them because they had become so quiet and I hadn't seen them for a half hour or so.

Without warning, I heard a loud buzz from behind the blinds, then one of the bugs escaped from one end while the other came up over the top. I was frozen in my chair for a moment that really felt like forever. When I came to my senses, though, I leaped from my chair, knocking over the glass of lemonade I had just poured for myself, sending the cat flying from fright, and then stumbling over one of the shoes I had thrown at the insect devils earlier that evening.

I screamed loudly as I ran to grab the nearest aerosol can, hoping whatever was in it would kill the bugs. I didn't bother to read what was in the can, just held down the button and aimed toward one of the bugs, releasing as much of the spray from inside as I could. I continued to scream as the targeted bug flew madly toward the ceiling, crashed, then dropped like a stone. I kept the stream coming from the can trained on the bug as it thrashed and scooted around the carpet.

Finally, it stilled, the final death throes of its little bug body shuddering a bit. Immediately I turned my attention to the second bug, my scream of fear turning into a hunter's cry of sorts. My first conquest gave rise to courage inside me as I climbed onto the ottoman, my trusty spray can pointed and at the ready. Movement in the corner of my eye made me turn to my right, and there was the second bug, hurtling through the air toward me. With a gutteral yell form deep in my chest, I depressed the spray button again, and a steady stream of my aerosol weapon hit the bug mid air, sending it hurtling back against the wall. Stunned, the bug fell to the floor, so I quickly bounded toward it.

As I moved toward the chair the bug fell behind, I felt something brush my cheek, and my scream of fear returned when I realized my buggy foe had escaped his temporary trap. I jumped backward, stepping on the cat's tail, which made him screech in pain and suprise. I couldn't take time to comfort him, though. I was out for bug's blood. I spun and chased the bug into a corner, a steady stream coming from the can. Finally, the bug drooped in flight, then hit the floor, barely able to move. I continued to spray, though, my can honed on my winged enemy, until all movement stopped.

Finally, I plopped onto the sofa, my eyes moving from one bug to the other, making sure they were both, in fact, dead. As my racing heart slowed its pace, I finally realized I had no idea to what I owed so much gratitude in helping me kill my prey. I lifted the can to eye level: Aqua Net.

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

{EPS} Creative Writing - A picture's worth a thousand words

Assignment: Given a photo, without knowing the photo's story or title, write a short story based on the photo.

Photo given: Migrant Mother and her Children


Emily was tired. It seemed like she had spent her entire life fighting, and there didn't seem to be an end to the fight in sight. When she was younger, the fight wasn't too bad. It was only her and Jeb, and if they had to, they could go a night without food. In fact, their first year married, they often would share a meal that should have fed only one.

Jeb worked his fingers to the bone in the fields every day, late into the night. Emily cleaned the Abernathys's home each day and took in their laundry at night to earn money,t oo. Yet no matter how hard they worked, there was not always enough to go around. They became experts at juggling their finances. "Robbin' Peter to pay Paul," she can still hear Jeb say.

It wasn't long before their first little one came along, though. Sarah was such a blessing to them, and as their family of two became three, it seemed everything was going to be ok. Jeb got a raise, and the Abernathys shared Emily's name with another family, so she was cleaning two houses. The money stretched a little further, and they all went to bed with their bellies full every night.

Ten months after Sarah was born, Jeremiah came into the world two months early. Eighteen months later, the twins, Billy and Jilly, came along. Then there was Becky, Sam, and finally little Elizabeth. Their family swelled so quickly and by so many, it at first didn't seem like much of a difference, but soon things got almost too difficult. Emily and Jeb would fight, and the kids, who could hear them screaming through the paper-thin walls, would cry themselves to sleep almost every night.

When Elizabeth was two, Emily got the call she dreaded. Jeb had gotten caught in the baler and was killed. The grief crippled Emily for months, so by the time she was able to face the world again, she was already so far in a hole with her bills and debts, there was no way she would ever work her way out.

And now, the greatest humiliation and pain of all came. She lost the house she and Jeb were so proud of. It wasn't much -- just a two-bedroom, tar-paper wall house most would think was a shack. But it was their own. Jeb was so proud of it. And she had lost it.

Now, as she sat with the two youngest kids clinging to her, crying in her ear that they were hungry, and she didn't know what would happen next...or if she could even go on.
She was just so tired.

{EPS} Creative Writing - Journal #2

Topic: He turned the key in the lock and opened the door. To his horror, he saw…

his lover, sprawled on their bed, her mouth open wide as if she were screaming. His eye roamed over her body, trying to take in the scene...trying to understand what he saw but that his brain couldn't comprehend.

His hand flew to his mouth, which hung agape in disbelief. Never did he think he would see her like this. He felt like he had been punched in the stomach. His guts wretched inside him. He never thought he could feel such anger and betrayal. Immediately the bile rose in his throat and he felt like he was going to vomit.

He couldn't believe she was laying there like that, so vulnerable, so open. How could she do this to him? His eyes slid back up her body to her face, mouth parted, head back. His gaze roamed down her throat, the skin taught, supple and perfect, stretched tight.. Further his eyes moved down, over her shoulder, down her arm to her hand clenched tight...

The knife's blame gleamed back at him, despite the droplets of her blood congealing on its edge. He turned and collapsed to his knees in the doorway, his body shaking as the first sobs boiled from deep inside.

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Random poetry

Sweet little bird
Trapped in a cage
Not of her own making,
But one of golden bars.
Lovely, glittery bars,
But as pretty as they are,
They trap her nonetheless.

She once loved her place
Where she felt safe
And knew where she was.
But her one little
Taste of freedom prooved
No matter how pretty,
A cage is just a trap.

Madly, she flaps her wings,
Slamming against the
Cage's walls, trying to find
Her way out. But instead
She falls to the floor,
Out of breath, broken
And bruised.

And so slowly she
Pulls herself back up
To her perch, fluffs her
Feathers, dries her tears,
Covers her wounds, and
Puffs out her feathered chest,
Smiling like nothing's wrong.

Monday, June 18, 2012

The Dead Muse Challenge #1

Challenge #1:  Wicked
Challenge Item:  "Hold onto something.  This is gonna be wicked."
Challenge Start Date:  June 13, 2012
Challenge End Date:  June 20, 2012


"Hold on to something. This is gonna be wicked," he said as he strapped me into the little log boat. He didn't have to tell me to, though. My hands were already gripping the bar so tight my knuckles were white.

What seems so safe and fun to many is terrifying to me, and he knew it. I have an insane fear of heights and speed ... and when you mix the two together, I'm a mess of nerves.

He called me early that morning and told me to meet him at the amusement park. It's something we did often together -- just walking, hand in hand, watching the people and talking was one of my favorite things to do. We had often discussed my fears of heights and speed, irrational as they may be.

When I got to the park, my stomach sank, though, when I went to our usual meeting place. We always meet at the central fountain, but on this morning, the cart from the Mine Shaft Drop was in my way. It looked as if some uncaring giant child had tossed it aside when he was done with his play for the day.


I asked one of the park employees what happened.

"Last night's storm knocked it off its tracks," he said. "I guess it landed it here. And now, dammit, we have to figure out how to get the friggen thing outta here.

"We're just lucky it happened when the park was closed. If people had been ridin' it....well, I hate to think what would have happened."

I shuddered at his words and wandered to a nearby bench where I knew he would see me when he arrived. I hugged my knees tight to my chest and watched park employees walk around the tossed cart, scratching their heads and whispering to one another, trying to find an easy and elegant solution to a problem they never had to face.

As I watched, darkness suddenly blocked them from my sight as a pair of hands covered my eyes. "Guess who," he whispered in my ear, his voice and breath so familiar and comforting to me. I smiled wide and reached up to cover his hands with mine briefly before taking them in mine.

As I turned my head for a kiss, he whispered, "I have such a surprise for you," followed by a small, playful peck on my lips. He slipped a blindfold over my eyes and said, "Just trust me," as he held my hands in his and guided me to my feet.

Slowly he led me through the park. The darkness that swallowed my view only heightened my other senses. Voices were more distinct, laughter more musical, and the sweet-tangy scent of sugar mixed with hot oil and the dough of funnel cakes filled my nostrils.

I actually enjoyed the walk through the park like this: My sight blocked so I could see nothing, but the sounds and scents were at once so familiar and more vibrant than ever.

Finally he stopped me, though, and guided me to a seat, his hands on my hips, gently pushing me this way, pulling me that, then whispering in my ear to sit, his breath hot as it tickled my hair against my skin.

Then I felt it: The bar lowered across my lap and snapped into place. I felt his hands move quickly around me, strapping me into the seat with the safety belt before I could protest...or even realize what was happening.

He leaned close and kissed my lips again as he slid the blindfold up and over my head. I blinked in the bright sunlight, my eyes aching because they had grown so used to the darkness of the blindfold, the light stung.

Finally, when I could see, I looked down to see he had strapped me into one of the small log boats on the log plume ride. I opened my mouth to protest.

"No..." I got out before his fingers on my mouth hushed me.

"Trust me," he said. "You'll thank me whenit's over. Now hold on to something. This is going to be wicked."

As the last syllable left his lips, the small boat lurched forward, and I was on my way to face my two strongest fears head on...and alone.


I couldn't help but scream as the boat pulled away, floating along the chute of the ride, bumping the walls occasionally. At first, despite my anticipatory screams of fear, I enjoyed the ride. It was slow and easy...but I could see what was coming.

Soon the boat began climbing, inching its way up a steep incline...higher and higher. With each small jerk of the boat, my stomach sank lower. I really couldn't hold back my fear anymore as I reached the peak of the hill.


The boat crested the hill, and there I was, face to face with the height of the ride...I had to be 50 feet in the air at this point...and I knew the as soon as the boat jerked forward one more time, it would plummet down the chute before me.



Down the little boat plummeted, so fast the wind whipped my hair around my head and stole my screams before they even escaped my lips.

When the boat splashed down at the bottom of the hill, I was finally able to catch my breath and let my fingers relax just the slightest bit from their deathgrip on the bar. Before I knew it, though, another hill was in front of me, looming like the giant in a fairy tale...menacing, dark, and the embodiment of fear.

Slowly the boat climbed the hill, then turned a corner...turned it too sharply! I felt the boat rock and sway beneath me, but it was too much. My head couldn't stop swimming as the boat tipped firther than it should, landing on its side in the chute.



I screamed at the top of my lungs and held on to the boat for dear life, all feeling in my fingers now long gone from gripping the bar so tightly. I could hear voices, shouts, louder than usual, but I couldn't make out what they were saying. I could only squeeze my eyes tight, feeling the tears of my realized fears stream down my face.

Higher and higher the sideways boat climbed the ride, the chain pulling it grinding, squeaking and straining to pull me up the hill. Finally, at the top of the hill, the chute flattened out and curved sharply. As the boat swung through the curve, it rocked and swayed again, tossing me around inside like a limp rag doll.

As it swung through the corner, though, the boat finally righted itself just before plummeting down the final hill of the ride. The speed pushed the air past my face so quickly it dried the tears on my cheeks.

After the final splash, the boat slowed and pulled into the boat house. I looked up, panting, shaking, unable to speak or even think. My first sight, though, was his face.

He stood there with his mouth slightly agape, his face white as chalk. As soon as my boat jerked to a halt, he rushed to me, grabbing me in his arms and squeezing me tight.

"Oh sweetheart I am so sorry." his words rushed into my ears as we clung to each other. "Are you ok? Are you hurt? Oh god, I was so frightened. I am so sorry, and I will never do anything so stupid again. I'm never leaving your side again!"

As he spoke, he held me close to him with one arm while he unstrapped me with the opposite hand. He pulled me to my feet and helped me from the boat before sweeping me into the tightest embrace I have ever had.

We clung to one another like this for what seemed like hours, until my heart and breath had slowed and I had quit shivering. Park employees surrounded us, but they parted as the park manager walked briskly through the crowd to us.

After many apologies from the manager and several free passes to the park, we decided to leave. As we strolled through the park toward the exit, our arms around each other, I couldn't help but toss a final glance at the log ride over my shoulder.

As I turned my head, I caught him looking at me, his eyes filled with fear, love, sorrow and warmth. I smiled at him softly, looked down, then liften my eyes back to his.

"Can I tell you something?" I asked. "Would you think I'm crazy if I said I want to go again?"

Random Poetry

I wrote this on the notepad of my iPhone the other day.

I sat there and waited ...
Waited for you to come back,
But I never saw your face.

The long, dusty road stretched out before me,
Its length snaking through the trees,
My line to you ... but you're not there.

Please come back to me.

{EPS} Creative Writing - Assignment #1

This assignment was for us to write a character biography with ourselves as the protagonist.


She is a relatively quiet girl who enjoys people watching more than being a part of "the crowd". She is, at her core, very shy, but she works hard every day to overcome the intense shyness that overtook most of her younger years. Because she is shy and quiet, though, some people think she is a bit snobby and perhaps feels like she is too good for everyone else. One of her deepest secrets, though, is that she usually doesn't feel good enough. She has always wanted to fit in and be a part of the crowd, but her shyness always pulls her away from that.

She has a deep faith that she doesn't flaunt, but she lives it in hopes that others will see it in her actions and demeanor. It's not always easy, though, because she has a biting, sarcastic wit that some think is hilarious, but others sometimes feel is hurtful. (She wishes this wasn't so, though, because she would rather cut off her own arm than hurt anyone ever.)

For those who see the humor in what she says at those moments, though, a lovely surprise awaits, because one of her secret dreams was to be a stand up comic. Perhaps she still will one day.

She often thinks too much and gets trapped in her own imaginings and thoughts, but when she has her "blonde moments", you would never guess she is as intelligent as she truly is. Rather than flaunt her smarts, she generally just stays quiet. When she finds a peer group on the same intellectual wavelength, though, she delights in it and basks in conversation, mild debate, and speculation.

Her biggest joy in life is to help others, whether it is to make them smile when they feel down or to aid in solving a problem that plagues them. She is a solution-finder, and while she is always willing to be a listening ear to those who need it, she has to reign herself in from giving advice for which she wasn't asked.

Her family and friends are her most cherished possessions in the world, though she does enjoy a good piece of cheesecake now and then, too.

{EPS} Creative Writing - Journal #1

This was my first journal assignment at Edgewood Prep School's Creative Writing Class. The topic: If I Ruled the World


I sit here all alone, staring at the telephone then sliding my gaze to the computer monitor before me. The headlines are bleak: "32 die in Car Bombing in Mogadishu"; "Riots break out in Madrid"; "Revolution in Iran leaves thousands dead".

"What have I gotten myself into?" I think. It seemed like a great idea, applying to rule the world. It's every kid's dream, really: All the money, ice cream and power you could want, right?

I didn't count on humanity, though. I didn't bank on the fact that whether under one ruler or a thousand, people are still people, and they will still fight. Wars will still happen. Blood will still be shed.

I lay my head down on my hands, laying on top of my desk, and feel tears come to my eyes. I take a deep breath, and then I pray.

I feel a bit of a peace come over me. I feel the answer to this problem become clear. No one person should rule the world.

I pick up my phone and quickly summon my staff. When they arrive in my office, I tell them of my plans...plans to appoint leaders who each have qualities that best suit their country.

"Is that the best way, though, Ma'am?" asks one advisor. "Should one person even have that much power? To choose who will rule?"

I turn from them to look out the window and sigh deeply. My mind reels with "What if"s and plans.

I know this is not a solution I will come to easily....

Friday, May 11, 2012

Name poem assignment

Assignment: Write a poem using each of the letters of your first name to begin a line of a poem describing you.

Lauryn

Loving and giving are the standards by which she lives,
Always trying to treat others the way she wants to be treated,
Until eventually she sometimes feels she's given all of herself away.
Remembering that she must save some of herself for herself,
Yanking her heart from others, she tucks it away,
Never revealing it to anyone.

Bullying Assignment

Assignment: Write a poem inspired by the poem read in class about bullying and your own ideas about bullies/bullying.

Because you feel little

You laugh at that kid
walking down the hall
with a slight limp
and no self esteem at all
because you feel little.

You push that boy
who is smaller than you
and weaker, too,
and knows that he is,
because you feel little.

You tease that girl
who is overweight
and hates herself already
because she thinks she's worthless
because you feel little.

You look in the mirror
and know when you see them
you're looking at yourself
because your heart is broken
and you feel little.

But instead of being
a bigger person and
helping those who're weaker
and building up the low,
you laugh, push and tease,
because you feel little.

Friday, May 4, 2012

Film inspiration poem

Assignment: Write a poem inspired by a movie or a clip from a movie.

Inspiration film: Summer Magic by Disney Studios
Clip: Femininity



It's a girl thing

It's a girl thing to know how
To balance intelligence, motivation and desire
With femininity, submission and a family.

It's a girl thing to know where
That thin, fragile line is between
Being a human and being a "lady".

It's a girl thing to know when
It is ok to be prim and proper and
It is ok to be visceral and passionate.

It's a girl thing to know why
It takes both sides, the feminine and "not"
To be successful in all ways today.

It's a girl thing to know what
It means to have a servant's heart while
Not giving up your own dreams.

Art inspiration poem

Assignment: Write a poem inspired by a work of art



Ballet Dancer by Artist Unknown

Tiny Dancer

Poofs of pink
Swaying tulle
She spins on her toes

Hair in a bun
Tiara in place
She smiles as she sways

The audience claps
And roars to its feet
And tosses roses to her

Her heart soars
She smiles wide
And then she opens her eyes

The wheelchair's still there
Her legs are still lame
But in her heart the ballet dancer remains

Song Inspiration Poem

Assignment: Write a poem inspired by a song of your choosing.

Inspiration song: My Wish by Rascal Flatts


No matter
Your road in life may be rocky and rough,
but no matter what happens I hope you see
that people love you, but none as much as me.

I hope that everything you want in life comes
to you, no matter if you aim high or low
because i love you. I hope you know.

May everything in the world be yours,
happy or sad, easy or not. But no matter what
I love you, and my heart is always for you.

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Inspiration Assignment

Assignment: Pick the lyrics of one of two given songs and write a poem based on it. I chose "Don't Lose Hope"

It'll Be OK

You look at yourself in the mirror
And all you can see
Are the zits and lines and flaws,
But that's not what I see.

It'll be OK,
Just wait and see.
Cuz everything changes
Eventually.

Report card's due and you know
All there is are Ds,
And you know you can't do the work,
But that's not what I believe.

It'll be OK,
Just wait and see.
Cuz everything changes
Eventually.

All your friends going out on a date.
You stay home watchin' Glee.
Your ugly face will never catch a boy,
But that's not what I see.

It'll be OK,
Just wait and see.
Cuz everything changes
Eventually.

You're 30 now: good job, kids and home.
You realize you're happy.
You waited, and worked, and never gave up,
And now you see what I see.

It'll be OK,
You waited to see.
Cuz everything changes
Eventually.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Farewell OSHS Assignment

Assignment Write a poem about your memories of Oceanside, your feelings that it is closing.

Gone, but not forgotten

Two years, two schools.
Hundreds of students' lives
Will never be the same.

Jill, Gattz, the Gilman clan.
Hundreds of SL kids have been
Changed because of you.

Me, myself....big or little.
I'll always be grateful for everything
You made my SL childhood.

You gave so many opportunity.
You gave so many laughter.
You gave so many such memories.

But when the doors close
And the hallways echo quiet,
Oceanside will not disappear.

In our minds, hearts and memories
Your work, your time, sweat and tears
Have left behind diamond-like gems

Of happiness and the kinds of things
Only this world can bring. Only love
And passion can bear.

I love you.
I love Oceanside.
Thank you.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

A note on this blog

I started this blog as a way to share and showcase the poetry I wrote for Ms Saphy's Poetry Class at Oceanside High School. Unfortunately and quite sadly, the school is closing.

The poems you see in this blog with "Assigment" either in the title or at the top of the entry were written for said class.

As I don't know yet what course I plan to take -- whether I enroll in another high school, and if I do, will it even have a poetry class -- I do intend to continue writing poetry, even if for a little while.

I hadn't written poetry for a long time before Ms Saph's class, and it has inspired me to write again. I enjoy it too much to let it go again so easily.

Please do feel free to leave comments, but please be nice about it. (Remember the old, "If you don't have anything nice to say, don't say anything at all"?) I can handle constructive criticism -- and welcome it -- but not meanness or rudeness. Remember, you're a visitor here.

With that: Enjoy!

Random Poetry

Hypocrite. Misfit.
Swooping in and
make a hit.

Chastize. Lyin' eyes.
Break my heart and
criticize

Me. When I deny
That I could ever love
and stand by

And watch you. So untrue.
You broke my heart and
made it two

Pieces. Decreases
The chance that I will ever

Ever

Ever love again.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Art Assignment

Assignment: Use a piece of art (other than photography) as inspiration for a poem.

Inspiration Piece: Sunday Afternoon on the Island of Grand Jatte by Georges Seurat



Dot to Dot

Hot dot. Point of light.
Find a mate and get it right.

A point joint. Every shade
Gathers, a lovely painting has made.

Woman, man, arm in arm,
Dressed for all the world to charm.

Two by two, they come for fun
And spend a lovely day in the sun.

The day's rays beating down.
Throw your worries, let them drown

In dreams streams, an ocean blue.
Send them far away from you.

Frail sail, flutters in the wind.
Never wish the day to end.

Person/Place/Thing Assignment

Assignment: Find photos of a person, a place and a thing and write a single poem incorporating all 3.

NOTE: The person pic is one taken in SL but is Yoko Ono....from her flickr....seriously. I was searching "Second Life" on Flickr and found it and chose it SIMPLY because it is Yoko Ono lol Her caption for it said she did this parachute jump on SL on John Lennon's birthday in honor of him

Person

Place


Thing



Yoko Ono: Superstar

Parachute. Down she floats
Onto the island of misfits.
A silent wedge. On John she dotes
Until she breaks them to bits.

Big bug specs. Peace sign hand.
Ruining the groups she meets.
She calls it art, the plastic band.
Hacking her screams on the streets.

Then under the peace tree
He lays at rest, imagining no war.
All alone, it's just she
And the band that is no more.

Monday, March 5, 2012

Photography Assignment

Assignment: Write a poem inspired by a photograph.



She Can't See Me
Softly she laughs, lips curled slightly,
Her head tilted to the left and her hair,
An auburn, silken wave, spilling over her face.
Her eyes pierce mine, look into me,
But she can't see me at all.

I watch her every night, here with her friends,
At the Double Feature Drive Inn, and I wish
I could be with them, laughing and free,
Instead of behind this counter where
She can't see me at all.

Oh, that I could tell her how her laugh
Invades my thoughts and dreams, thrilling
Me, wrenching my soul to the core.
But I stand here mute when she is so close.
She can't see me at all.

I wish I could write for her a sonnet describing
How I want to run my hands through her hair,
Over her face, and kiss her velvet lips,
Instead of being Ken the snack bar man
Who she can't see at all.

And so night after night, I am doomed to watch
Her walk away from me, arm in arm with him.
I imagine the sweet nothings they whisper and the
Plans she makes with him instead of me,
The man she can't see at all.

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Prose/Verses Assignment

Assignment: Choose one of three poems and write a paragraph about it and then a poem.

Inspiration Piece: Mother to Son by Langston Hughes
Well, son, I'll tell you:
Life for me ain't been no crystal stair.
It's had tacks in it,
And splinters,
And boards torn up,
And places with no carpet on the floor --
Bare.
But all the time
I'se been a-climbin' on,
And reachin' landin's,
And turnin' corners,
And sometimes goin' in the dark
Where there ain't been no light.
So, boy, don't you turn back.
Don't you set down on the steps.
'Cause you finds it's kinder hard.
Don't you fall now --
For I'se still goin', honey,
I'se still climbin',
And life for me ain't been no crystal stair.

My prose:

The poem Mother to Son by Langston Hughes is such an inspiring poem to me because of the imagery in the poem as well as the message behind the poem. I love the fact that the poet compares life to a set os stairs. Not only does he use descriptions of what could be on the stairs to trip someone up, but the idea that life is a climb, that can make you tired and out of breath, but moves you upward is awesome. The message behind the poem is very inspirational, too. The mother in the poem tells her son that no matter how difficult life gets -- and it will get very difficult at times -- you can never stop, you can never look back, you have to keep moving upward. I think the poem is one that anyone, regardless of race or social status, can relate to and learn from because of its imagery and message.

My poem:

Always going, always climbing,
Never stop to take a breath.
Keep looking up, keeping moving on.
Don't go back to once was.
It twists, it turns,
There's bumps and burns,
But life continues,
so climb, honey, climb.
Reaching upward, getting stronger,
Through pain and time.
Always going, always climbing,
Don't you stop, no matter what.
Keep looking up, keep moving on,
Don't go back to once was.

All of My Heart

Assignment: Choose a song then write a poem based on that song's lyrics.
My Song: Love Song for a Savior by Jars of Clay

Love Song for a Savior

My poem

I close my eyes and dream of the day
When I can be with you forever, in your arms,
Never needing the rest of the world.

My heart beats faster when I try to imagine
Your face and how it will feel the first time
I see You eye to eye.

Every part of me yearns to be forever Yours,
Close by Your side, day after day, hour by hour,
And simply look into Your face.

Deeper than any ocean, higher than any mountain,
My love for You grows every day. My minutes pass by
And all I can do is dream of you.

Every breath that I take, every beat of my heart,
I give them all to You to have as Your own.
I love You so.

Please take me as I am, knowing that the deeper I fall,
The better and stronger I become, until Your love and heart
Are all I want in the world.

Happy and Blessed

Assignment: If your life was a poem, what would its title be? I chose "Happy and Blessed".

Extra credit: Write a poem for your title.

My poem

No more dark clouds
Can shade my way.
I've fought the night
And won.
I've been to hell,
Through it and back.
I know what evil is,
But I've left it behind.
He has blessed me with
Promises unnumbered.
I can't even fathom
His love for me.
Grace unmeasured,
Father, Savior,
Thank You for all
You have given me.

The Silence (Assignment 1)

Assignment: Read three sets of song lyrics as poems, then choose one to use as inspiration for your own poem.

Inspiration Piece 2

Well if you told me you were drowning, I would not lend a hand
I've seen your face before my friend, but I don't know if you know who I am
Well I was there and I saw what you did, I saw it with my own two eyes
So you can wipe off that grin, I know where you've been
It's all been a pack of lies
I can feel it in the air tonight, oh Lord
Well I've been waiting for this moment for all my life
Well I remember, I remember, don't worry, how could I ever forget
It's the first time, the last time we ever met
But I know the reason why you keep your silence up, oh no you don't fool me
Well the hurt doesn't show, but the pain still grows
It's no stranger to you and me
I can feel it coming in the air tonight, oh Lord
Well been waiting for this moment for all my life oh Lord


My poem

You look away from me
And keep your lips silent,
Not sharing the pain that led
You to be the monster you are.

But I saw what you did,
I know what you are.
I want to scorn you
But I only feel pity.

I reach out my hand,
Hoping to help.
But then pull away because
You sicken me.

I turn and walk away,
I cant even look at you anymore.
Keep your secrets to yourself
Because I don't want to know.