...She will get a carbon fiber bicycle in lieu of an
engagement ring…
She will love it…
She will immortalize, in a poem: bicycle, fiancée,
and grueling joy of keeping up on back-road rides…
She will fiercely grieve that functional engagement
ring when it is stolen from garage fourteen years later (July 2014)…
She will be forced to settle on a silver lining:
bicycle lives on in poem…
Dragonfly, the poem based on the 200 EMS Kestrel my husband
gave me when we got engaged, is forthcoming in November Butterfly (Saddle Road Press, November 1, 2014) and was
originally published in The Art of Bicycling: A Treasury of Poems (Breakaway Books, 2005), edited by former
Bicycling Magazine editor Justin Daniel Belmont. It opens like this:
Dragonfly
In lieu of the ring, a carbon fiber
frame.
You had it custom done, turned it
for me
In the sun outside our one-room
flat,
This way: violet green, that: honey
red….
…heartsick
about it, but what can you do. The thief couldn’t have known it doubled as an
engagement ring. Beach-combing,
as if in response to the vacuum left by the bike, my husband nets seven
left-foot fins and a plastic woman fire-fighter, salty, stacked and gloved (the
figure, I mean).
When I take morning tea and my notebook out to the back patio,
I find her planted with ginormous plastic boots on the table, fire-hose she lost
to the sea supplanted by a colored pencil (it turns out, by my youngest son).
You don’t have to tell my little guy twice: regardless of gender, you can fight
a fire, write a poem, or survive a screaming descent from the saddle of a
bicycle and live to bear and/or raise children.
Been there? Have a high octane partner? Survived a few adventures out of your comfort zone? How do you converge and thrive? Would love to know...
Poetry News and related links:
Soundings East arrived today in the mail with the
winning entry for the 2014 Claire Keyes Poetry Awards: Amy Pence, winner, for
“The Lives of Composers,” “A Sensuous Proposal,” and “Naked City.” Runners-up:
yours truly, for “Black Angel: Scripted, Never Shot” and Scott Withiam, for
“Garish.” To order a copy, visit Salem State University’s website. Poems were
chosen by Joan Houlihan. Additionally, Soundings East Editors selected poems by Judith
Barrington,
Elton Glaser, and Bill Turley. Next reading period for submissions is Sept 1, 2014 to April 1, 2015.
Related posts on marriage:
Some Mother: Abalone vs. Coffee
Feral Wife: Two Chainsaws, the Ocean, and an Untended Husband
Car Tantrums, Non-Parental Observers and the Cops
Why Every Wife Could Use Her Own Hmong Tribe (and a Thundershirt)
Elton Glaser, and Bill Turley. Next reading period for submissions is Sept 1, 2014 to April 1, 2015.
Thumbelina was nominated as one of six poems for the
Sundress Publications Best of the Net Anthology to represent Zoetic Press and The
NonBinary Review (thanks to Allie Marini Batts). To read the issue in which Thumbelina appears, visit Zoetic Press to download the free app.
Or view the accompanying poetry movie Thumbelina
(features the photography of Robyn Beattie, Stephen Pryputniewicz on keyboard,
and some exquisite stills by artists Victoria Ayres, Genevieve and Raymond Barnhart, David
Best, Max Fuller, Ned Kahn, and Ron Rodgers). Or follow The NonBinary Review on Facebook for links they'll be posting to supplementary artwork and videos to accompany the Fairytale issue. They are still taking Frankenstein submissions for the next couple of weeks.
Related post about The Art of Bicycling on the blog
Better Living Through Beowulf:
Imagination Unleashed: Children on Bikes by Robin Bates
A few bicycle haiku I wrote for the haiku room:
My bicycle, My Chariot and the Angel Tree: Writing Despite ChaosRelated posts on marriage:
Some Mother: Abalone vs. Coffee
Feral Wife: Two Chainsaws, the Ocean, and an Untended Husband
Car Tantrums, Non-Parental Observers and the Cops
Why Every Wife Could Use Her Own Hmong Tribe (and a Thundershirt)
2 comments:
So sorry to hear about the loss of your bicycle, T. But congratulations on your poetry awards! Awesome!
Thanks for the condolences Liz! Hope the blackberries are gearing up for pie time.
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