Showing posts with label rebecca. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rebecca. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Theme: Surviving the Wreckage






How to Comb Through the Wreckage


 
Rescue workers and volunteers comb through
her memory for survivors. Somewhere deep


below the debris, a little girl is learning to tie
her shoelaces using the bunny ear method;


a man is washing a paisley tie with dish soap
in the kitchen sink, a weeping willow tree,

his hairy knuckles wringing out disappointment
and how the wind grieves like an infant.


This is one way you'll remember, her doctor says
tapping on a photo album her husband brought along.


She'll be charged for an hour, but will receive
only a quarter of the doctor's time. He uses words


she doesn't understand while her husband flips
through the pages of their lives with great ease.


How do we all go on, each second, each minute,
each hour, each day, anticipating the next disaster?


Then the mechanics, like whether or not we ever really
know when the time has come for us to stop searching?


 
-rebecca schumedja



Destiny Isn’t Just a Seven Letter Word


My plane crashed
several years ago,
you’re just stepping
from the fiery rubble
of your own fatality.



We pick through
the wreckage
like characters from LOST
hoping to find the remains
of who we once were.


The smoke is laced
with jet fuel, so thick
we often cover our faces
to the thickness
of its implied tragedy.


Our hands meet
at the same time
on a half-charred remnant,
our skin full of electricity
and untethered hope.

 


-aleathia drehmer



 
 
 

 
 

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Theme: Mess



Pablo Picasso once said "Every child is an artist.  The problem is how to remain an artist once we grow up."  Sometimes a mess is a genius inspiration when we have lost our inner child, our inner imagination to think beyond the rules, and let the colors fly.

-aleathia drehmer and rebecca schumedja

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Just Coffee Please

As you poke at the yolk of a sunny-side up egg, yellow
runs over a bed of home fries, I see an overturned nest
from my childhood—shattered shells, partially formed birds
encased in slime over freshly cut grass.