A poem a day keeps the cobwebs off my keyboard. |
I miss those raucous afternoons, and the chaotic chorus of sibling voices shouting over one another, as if debating was a sport. Our family stories had the audience they deserved. We laughed out of love, not to mock, knowing that the shared insanity kept us together despite our differences. Those crowded backyard reunions - everyone competing for a folding chair, a place at the table, the edge of a bench, the losers taking a seat on a cooler or in the prickly, brown growth your landscaper called grass, trying for a spot in the shade of your lone diseased and leafless tree as it cast its cascade of caterpillars onto our heads and our plates. Will there ever be another time when we feel so complete and carefree in a cloud of smoking charcoal, listening to the music of sausages sizzling on a summer fire? When you left us, you left us without our planner, without the force that shaped those circles of family and love and we’re all useless, you know, without you. It’s been four summers since you left us, I don’t remember if they were hot or stormy. There were no fireworks, as if even they were only willing to light up for you. Four summers and your garden is filled with strangers now, there are no bowls of potato salad, no burgers waiting to be flipped, and we are so far apart and so alone without you. 34 Lines Written for The Taboo Words Contest - August 2020 Prompt: COOKOUT Taboo words: food barbecue grill gathering beer or any derivatives of these words |