Vintage Libido, Haibun Sequence
A billfold-sized black and white picture of my mother and father from the late ‘40s. It’s yellowed and scalloped around the edges. My dad is lanky and has a smouldering edge with his white T-shirt and Burt Lancaster trousers. My mom in a polka-dot frock, cuban-heel stockings and a snood. One arm around his waist, the other stretched out from her right side like a heron wing—Jack Kerouac and Rita Hayworth.
Lovers squint into
the brilliant winter
sun of 1942.
After we moved from small town Tennessee to Chicago, my father worked as an industrial engineer at Sears on the 44th floor of what was at the time the tallest skyscraper in the US. I hitchhiked across America, dropping out of college every other semester, and became fixated on Jack Kerouac. Not for his prose, but for his poetry. I loved to look at Jack. He was hot! It took years to make a connection between the early picture of my Dad and my crush on Kerouac.
Senior year sex
on the Volkswagen floor.
Muscles lit by streetlights.
By the time I was a teen, Dad looked misshapen and creepy—The Hunchback of Notre Dame in a plaid business suit. I looked forward to him disappearing on the commuter train and was glad when he took the late train back. I still ask, who was the boy-man in the snapshot? Who were my parents before I came along, obsessed with each other and eager to begin the journey? Maybe they were in love at some point, but my sister says they were just in lust.
Loretta Lynn on the car radio.
Sings nothing cold as ashes
after the fire is gone.
17 thoughts on "Vintage Libido, Haibun Sequence"
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Hot dog! That second haiku!!!
Wow!!!!
Those unexpected moments of unexpected 😲……amazing.
yes!!! Love this
, form, function and flat out craft.
❤️
Yikes. this poem comes to a frosty end
Love. I am entranced by the storytelling, inspired by the form.
Nancy, I just love the way your poems unfold. You create such a vivid moments for us to see and somehow experience with you or the folks/places you mention. I’m in awe. I especially love this part:
“Lovers squint into
the brilliant winter
sun of 1942.”
*Linda
Sorry for that! My autocorrect made “Linda” “Nancy”. Ugh!
Wow, Linda! Very cool.
Have I ever told you that my late friend Pat dated Kerouac?
P.S.; That Loretta Lynn snippet is a little switchblade.
The description and images really capture the feel and atmosphere of the time in which the events described occurred
This was a real treat. The second haiku, I’ll assume intentionally, made me very uneasy, and the way it feeds into the third section is nothing short of brilliant. A jarring little jaunt down some dark back road budding off frost-swoln memory lane.
Well done haibun!
Actually brilliant.
I still have a crush on Kerouac and did a little of hitching after reading him, but yes, his haiku are the best.
Love the walk you take us on! I try not to jog to the next line, as each line holds so much to soak up.
Beautiful, gifted work, as always.
It’s the scope and scale of this thing. The particulars and details that mount together into world building. Shit. The bed. Linda.
And ‘just in lust’ ? I’ll never think of any of us in the same way again.
Great details unfold this story. Especially love: “billfold-sized”, “smouldering edge”, and how the first haiku imparts emotion/place/time.
Linda, this is brilliant–the kind of poem I wish I could write! The detail and the vivid descriptions lead the reader into the depth of the poet’s emotions. Brava!
You’re pure Hollywood! Love every reel!
Well said!
I love the questioning behind this poem the most. What was the story of their earlier lives, and what happens to transform some people so completely from their earlier selves?