Compliments
I usually don’t remember them,
trust them, listen intently to them,
have been known to blush,
been so moved to tears or joy
I had to go somewhere.
Be
by myself
to take it all in
smile on the inside.
There’s a few I do remember:
In fifth grade when my dad went to jail,
we all tried to keep it a secret
for the three month duration,
he sat around playing cards
in an orange jumpsuit,
Sister Amica told my mom
at a parent-teacher conference
where I waited just outside the door
sitting on a hard bench
in the hallway where the janitor
had just mopped,
not in the ugly green plaid uniform
I had to wear at that school everyday,
Sister told my mom I was a real good writer
and to encourage me to write write write.
In college, a grad student I had a crush on–
finally drank too much, took me to bed
placed a needle on some recording of a god-awful
Wagner classical piece that played over and over again,
while I tried to make love like a grad student,
he said:
You are a cross between
Sissy Spacek & Faye Dunaway
At least, I think it was a compliment.
Most recently, my 12 year old grandson,
who grows about 2 inches a week,
and loves to swear around me
because I let him,
said he would really miss
me and G-Pa when we died,
and then we made waffles.
3 thoughts on "Compliments"
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Wonderful. He’ll definitely miss you and G-Pa. But he’ll have this poem, among other things, to remember you by.
These stories are all told so clearly. I appreciate this interesting and compelling poem
I really enjoy this.