Parody of "My Papa's Waltz" a poem by Theodore Roethke |
Those Days of MY Papa’s Waltz (A parody of Theodore Roethke's "My Papa's Waltz" Written May 24, 205 Mary Westlie-Jones Those days were not of wine and roses, of social grace, instruction in the finer things of life. In those days, Papa didn’t waltz, he stumbled, flayed fists flying, seeking young opponents. Not just on his breath, his clothes, the chair, whiskey’s smell was everywhere. It didn’t make me dizzy, It made me sick. A smell that wrenches my gut to this day. The look on Mama’s face when the pans came off their shelf was not frown, but fear. There would soon be violence near. The knuckles that held small wrists, that slammed heads, that broke teeth, Yes. They were battered, too. If he missed a step, we scattered, hoping for time enough to become lost to his wrath. A scraped ear would’ve been reprieve for my brother. Tyson has nothing on you. Bit it off, but wouldn’t chew. Champion of domestic dispute. Your beatings weren’t rhythmical, but they were timed. Fridays. Saturdays. Around midnight. Without fail. You woke us up from our wary slumber, your rants about what was left undone, or done the wrong way, pounded into our ears, and still echoes here. Those days were not wine and roses. Whiskey. Vomit. Strangers groping. Always hoping, You’d stay away. Your waltz could have killed us all. |