I needed to call you but
I’d forgotten your number,
the one I always thought
was burned into my memory —
for hours I anxiously thumbed through
white and yellow pages, forgetting
then remembering your name.
Between the pages I could see
your dining room, the floor
tile cracked like a spider’s
web, the old fridge where
all your kids stood before the
open door to feel the frigid
air on desperately hot days
while upstairs pretty ladies on
a calendar lounged without a
drop of sweat to mar their
fleshy perfection.
***
Photo of my grandmother and me. This poem was written from a dream about her.
Published in Mad Swirl, 2013.
Love this to death Charlotte. A wonderful write.
Anna :o]
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Love the spider pattern on the floor tile! We remember such intriguing things … and dreams have a way of amplifying, bringing back stuff stuck way down in the memory banks.
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I really like this, Charlotte–all the details in the poem capturing memories and your dream. Or dream memories, perhaps.
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