Dark Bars and Dog Parks

(a list poem, non-sequential, over 5 decades)

TastyKakes and stray kittens
Cuddling Bunny Boy
Cece beans and meatballs
Grandmom Gentile’s lap
Learning to crochet

Tea with a drop of whiskey
Tomatoes and purple pansies
6th and Fitzwater
Grandmom Pitts’ turkey
Milk shakes at Schwartzies

Gray sky and rowhouses
New Jersey malls
The back seat escape
Disco balls and stingers
Down the shore

Twilight and whistling winds
Irish actors, English sailors
Tequila night at the Opus
Rock stars and poets
William Butler Yeats

Thunder
Alto sopranos
Rhythm and blues
Sonny and Cher
Prince and Aretha

Earth, Wind, and Fire
Prometheus
Cezanne and the Bathers
Yin and yang
Rosey and Rufus

North Beach and Bloomsbury
Point Reyes seashore
The East Village
Cape May Point
The Delaware, the Schuylkill, the Wissahickon

Dark bars and dog parks.

Linda M. Pizzi

Dreaming of Angels

This is from my unpublished work called Viewings

I have my own room in the new house. This is a brand new house, just built, so nobody has ever slept in this room before. It’s fresh, and it’s up to me to fill it up.

I also have my own bed, a double bed. My brother, who is three years younger than me, still sleeps in a crib. He has his own room, too, but I don’t think he knows it. In the old house we were in the same room.

The furniture in my room used to be my cousin Nancy’s. She’s seven years older than me and my favorite cousin. My mother painted the bureau and the chest of drawers yellow. The wallpaper is mostly blue with little specks of yellow and dashes of silver. I guess my mother picked out the wallpaper.

Lots of times I don’t fall asleep right away. Maybe this is because the room feels so empty when the lights are out. I have a night light, but it’s still pretty dark. It’s good for shadow puppets, though, and when I can’t sleep, lots of times I make up stories with the puppets. The stories and the puppet people make it seem as if somebody else lives in my room with me.

My mother tucks me in every night and sits on the bed while I say my prayers. “Now I lay me down to sleep, I pray the Lord my soul to keep, and if I die before I wake, I pray the Lord my soul to take.” Whenever I say this I see myself standing in a train station. I’m wearing a dark blue robe and I’m carrying my soul in a suitcase. There’s nothing else around me except for a gray, cloudy feeling, and I concentrate on holding tight to the suitcase because I’m waiting to go to heaven, and I’ll have to take my soul with me. I’ve never told my mother what I see when we say the prayer together. If I can’t fall asleep she tells me, “Think about something nice.”

One night when I can’t fall sleep, just after my mother leaves, I lie on the bed and stare at the wall across from me. It isn’t as dark as usual because the hallway light is on, so the light isn’t good for shadow puppets. I close my eyes and open them again, scrunch them closed, then open them again and again, trying to make the sleep come. There are sparks behind my eyelids. “Think about something nice,” I tell myself, as I open and close my eyes. “Think about something nice, think about the angels.”

I open my eyes; the sparks are jumping. It’s as if they jump out of my eyes onto the wall. They get mixed up with the yellow specks and silver dashes. Then a bunch of angels appeared on the wall. The sparks and the dashes and the specks come together to make pictures of angels flying in the wallpaper. They look like kids around my age, with round faces and curly hair. They wear long blue robes and there must be holes in the back where the wings can come through out of their shoulder blades. I think, “Someday I could be an angel, too. If I get into heaven after I die. After I die. I’ll have to die to become an angel.” I don’t want to die and now I’m really scared, more afraid than the time I lost my mother in the toy department at Kiddie City. The angels on the wall disappear; they fall off with the sparks and the dashes and the specks of yellow. I don’t want to die, even if it means being with the angels. I’m crying and hearing my bedtime prayer in my head like an echo. My mother comes into the room. “Mommy, I don’t want to die, I don’t really want to be an angel.” She pulls me toward her, smoothing down my nightgown. “What brought this on?” she says. “You’re not going to die, not for a long time.” Mommy hugs me, and I hold onto her as tight as I can, so I won’t lose her.

The Man in My Bed

The man in my bed is a dog, literally–not figuratively, like what my friend Carrie meant when she said, “All men are dogs.” He’s a real dog and the best male I’ve ever slept with. Even now, his head on my pillow, front paws held together, as if saying a prayer. He lets me rest my elbow on his backside, content just to be near me.

Sometimes I really wish that men were more like dogs.

Rufus is more true and tender, more loyal than most of my long-gone boyfriends.

I’m not embarrassed to spread a thick layer of peanut butter, the creamy kind, on a slice of bread and eat it in front of him, all sticky lips and fingers. In fact, he’s most attentive at times like this, waits patiently to lick my fingertips. I never have to worry about his leaving up the toilet seat either, though I do have to keep the lid closed, so he won’t drink from it.

He’ll always be faithful, I’m certain of that. He’ll never have a wandering eye when we walk in the park. Maybe he’ll take off after a squirrel or a rabbit, but I know he’ll never catch one. He probably knows it too, but he sure does enjoy barking up that tree.

by Linda Pizzi, previously published by The Ravens Perch