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[ Saturday, May 28, 2005 ]

a bath
a song
listening until the water turns cold
running toes along the shower wall
living in one tiny room, believing
all is black outside that door
nothing

This is my playlist tonight:

Kind Woman-Buffalo Springfield
Come Away With Me-Norah Jones
Tampa to Tulsa-The Jayhawks
Wonderwall-Ryan Adams
When the Stars go Blue-Ryan Adams
Breathing-Lifehouse
Everything-Lifehouse
You and Me-Lifehouse
Omaha-Counting Crows
Raining in Baltimore-Counting Crows
Recovering the Satellites-Counting Crows
Lucky Man-The Verve
Lonestar-Norah Jones
The Wurlitzer Prize-Norah Jones
Broken Promise Land-Waylon Jennings
Wish You Were Here-Pink Floyd
America-Simon & Garfunkel

"let us be lovers we’ll marry our fortunes together
I’ve got some real estate here in my bag
So we bought a pack of cigarettes
and mrs. wagner pies
And we walked off to look for america

kathy, I said as we boarded a greyhound in pittsburgh
michigan seems like a dream to me now
It took me four days to hitchhike from saginaw
I’ve gone to look for america

Laughing on the bus
Playing games with the faces
She said the man in the gabardine suit was a spy
I said be careful his bowtie is really a camera

toss me a cigarette, I think there’s one in my raincoat
we smoked the last one an hour ago
So I looked at the scenery, she read her magazine
And the moon rose over an open field

kathy, I’m lost I said though I knew she was sleeping
I’m empty and aching and I don’t know why

Counting the cars on the new jersey turnpike
They’ve all gone to look for america
All gone to look for america
All gone to look for america"

~ Rebecca 11:55 PM [+] (0) comments
[ Friday, May 27, 2005 ]
it’s beginning to make sense
what i mean is
i understand
i understand how it happens

how it’s sometimes
a slow progression,
slithering around & through
the kneecaps, nipping
nipping, leaving
dainty red welts
to remember it by
to name

or how sometimes
you look up
in a bathroom mirror
after wiping spit & toothpaste flecks
from the glass,
your hair already in its fist
knuckles white

shit heap
on top of shit heap
eight quarters
isn’t enough
broken broom
isn’t enough
ford pick-up
not enough
your own skin
not enough

static stale coffee too many cigarettes this
urge this starvation this
hungry hungry mind
this need to crawl
outside your
body, to live
10 seconds
5 minutes
30 years
lifetimes
hours

unprotected

wounds meticulously
beautifully exposed
bones bare & wild & winding
through some strange stretch
of highway, in a city
unfamiliar with

the girl you were

or the woman
you’ve become.

~ Rebecca 12:01 AM [+] (0) comments
[ Saturday, May 07, 2005 ]
There's a little boy whose innocence and personality touches me so much it almost moves me to tears. Other times, I find myself cackling, bent over, holding my sides cackling. There's a little mischievous, funny look in his eyes & I recognize it so completely.

Last week, while feeding Cody, I thought about perfection. How so many people have these standards that are just impossible to live up to. What it must be like to feel that you have to meet that every day. To always be on guard. I watched Cody as he ate his eggs & ham & cheese & ketchup, forgoing his spoon, using his tiny fingers instead. I thought, 'This is perfection.' Being allowed to watch this child grow & learn. Being witness to the new words he picks up, new little dances he learns. Just being able to watch him eat his eggs & ham & cheese & ketchup. Seeing him so absorbed & so satisfied & so happy with something as simple as ketchup. It's overwhelming sometimes to really watch someone who is delighted with the moment. I love those times that I'm allowed to witness it.

Tonight me & Lisa baked a Strawberry Shortcake birthday cake. Tomorrow is Alana's birthday party. She'll be six. Her parents are going through a divorce. Almost everything in her tiny little world is turned upside down. And you can see it. In her face. Her eyes. The way she stands. Tonight, she was just looked so broken when her mom dropped her off. Her daddy asked her what was wrong. That frail little voice said, "I miss my Mommy." Alan hugged her, kissed her on the forehead. To see that was heartbreaking. Her pain was just so visible. But on top of that was this little attempt to cover it up. To hold it in. Heartbreaking.

Monday, our Uncle Roscoe died. He's my great-uncle. Papaw's brother. But he's always been called Uncle Roscoe & his great-nieces & nephews picked that up. His life & death is such a moving story.

A week or a few days before he died he told his wife, Joan, that her face was the last thing he wanted to see before he went. Moments before he died, he looked up at her & smiled. Roscoe was such a neat little man. Always groomed & presentable. Before Joan let the paramedics take him from the house, she bathed him, shaved him, cut a white t-shirt down the back & dressed him. He would have wanted that.

That is just such a testament to their love. All week I've tried to imagine the amount of strength that took, how hard it would be to choke back your own sadness & tend to the body of the person you love, only minutes after they've gone.

At the beginning of the funeral on Thursday, veterans from Beattyville stood by Roscoe's casket & saluted him one by one. Roscoe had served & was injured during World War II. Last year he received a Purple Heart. During the funeral a friend of his from Ohio spoke. He told the story of Roscoe's injury during the war as Roscoe had told him.

I didn't retain all the story, as much as I wanted to. Partially because, I had never heard it before & a large part of me was thinking 'I can't believe I didn't know this.' Roscoe had just crossed a creek. Behind him were German soldiers making their way across. Roscoe fought them off but was hit. He lost so much blood & his injuries were so severe that he passed out. When he came to, a German soldier was standing above him. Roscoe reached for his rifle. The German said, "Take him to the Americans. Take him to get treatment." After the transfer, Roscoe was in a Jeep. The driver was a young soldier from Beattyville, Kentucky, Roscoe's hometown. He said, "You're gonna be alright, Roscoe. I'll see you back in Beattyville."

Last year, at the celebration, when Roscoe received his Purple Heart, he did see that fellow. He had not seen him during all those years.

I hope that I have that story right. If I don't, or if there's more to add that I've left out & you know the story, please comment on here & re-tell it. It's just unbelievable to me that I'd never heard this. That such a story existed in our family & I never knew it.

Thursday, I looked four rows in front of me & saw mamaw & four of her daughters. Behind them, a fifth daughter & a son. Behind that row, another son, two granddaughters & a great-grandson. There are moments when you're overcome with pride. When you look at the people you've come from, the people who've had a part of your becoming, who've given little bits of themself freely to you. You look at them & feel so proud & thankful to have come from & been part of such a family. Not that we're perfect. But beautifully flawed. And able to admit that. And able to really love & accept each other, flaws included, flaws welcomed. That type of love has been handed down, generation to generation, taught by example. And it's still being handed down.

Sitting in the midst of that crowd, I thought about funerals, how there's always this sense of dread, how the general notion is that you're going their to say goodbye to pay respect. But it's so much more than that. It's not just about saying goodbye, being there because you have to be.
It's about celebrating a life. Celebrating everything that you shared with that person or knew about that person. Celebrating & being thankful to have been witness to such a life. For just being able to learn from or watch that person, even if the education came second-hand, through stories, through other people's observations.

I think about my family, my dad, all of mamaw's children, mamaw, my cousins. Your lives are not going unwitnessed. We recognize you, your love, your past, where you came from, where you went, where you're heading. We see it. You have made us & continue to make us better people, just by being able to witness your lives. Just being connected to this family, being able to say I'm Junior's daughter or Kathleen's grandaughter or Marcie's, Joan's, Marilyn's, Liz's, Rene's, Walter's, Logan's niece, makes me such a proud & thankful girl. I want you all to know that, to really know that.

I wish everyone could be lucky enough to have this type of family.

~ Rebecca 12:14 AM [+] (0) comments

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