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Owning the Avenue
Sometimes I’m running
So fast
All I hear is my own breath
Whooshing past,
Running blindly and high
Running to birds and sun and sky.
Once,
a cloudless summer day
I was running after Joe at age five.
No one knows where he goes—
My ponytails bobbing
Tongues of my ragged size-9 shoes hanging
Saying, Joe lemme come lemme come!
My house is a hornet’s hive!
My head throbbing,
My heart banging.
Soon I was running
Back to Mom tattling Joe DID it!
Let’s say I’m running,
Clinging and begging,
Halloween-picking or Easter-egging,
Or I’m at summer AWANA club.
Casey and Brittany, middle-schoolers
Pick me up and rock me cause I’m adorable,
Face-painted, T-shirted, brown-haired me
Tiny as a carseat’s armrest.
They’re singing
Jesus says to live
Give and give and give
Store your treasure
In Heaven where it lasts forever.
Let’s say I’m running
to Bluff Street Playground
Where big-girl swings are sunning
Kiddies hot-faced and funning
Lovers kissing
Basketballs missing
Thuggies glaring,
Stoners blankly staring—
David’s running off like a maniac—
Watch where he goes!
Forests of plastic steps and slides
I can run, I kiss the ground, I can dance,
I can glide.
I’m skinny-scared, tiny as a midge,
Pushed and carried by Mommy
Over the sand,
The Trolls’ and Billy Goat’s Bridge
Tomorrow
My small feet
Will be gunning
Let’s say I’m running
And yes, jumping
Jumping my new bike over clumsy brick-piles
Wishing I could go for miles
While Joe pops a wheelie,
Making the sidewalk burn.
My training wheels and big-girl wheels,
turn and turn and turn.
Let’s say I’m running
And hopping
And yes, sometimes stopping
To run in the hose-water
Hang from a tree-branch
Or just admire the view—
For every day
Is something new.
We spent long ago days
at homeschool mom playgrounds,
hot hot sand and glorious
SPRINKLERS,
So fine I memorized their shapes
And colors,
Once I was running through the water
In my regular clothes,
Gloriously soaked.
Big kids snapped their fingers
Way up on the monkey bars
And I was soooo mad,
Cause I couldn’t make my tiny fingers crack
One bit.
We spent my Seventh
Happy Birthday
On Bluff Street,
Ortizes eating cake,
Sun shining bright.
I got a doll named Sandy,
A sweet orange purse, candy-filled.
Mrs. Ortiz’s lover, baseball bat in hand,
Whack-whack-whacked the piñata—
Crack! Crash!
Running, scrambling,
I picked up those gooey, plasticky,
Disgusting strawberry candies.
Happy birthday,
Happy birthday,
In a sad
Cloudy
Bad
World.
An attempted-murderer
A violent psychopath
Broke the piñata at my seventh
Happy Birthday—
Oh, Lord,
We were all loco,
We were all a fragile pinata
Waiting to break.
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just so you know, idk if you read these, but firstly, because every time you comment it means way more thn you know, as a thank you i saw on your profile that you like historical fiction, so i tried to write one(it ended u with a trigger warning, but the effort was there). secondly, i can just about promise that every article you upload will have at least one comment. lastly, idk if you care, but pecause you inspired me to comment more im trying to comment on every peice of someone else. i think you may have just started a massive karma movement.
This is the true story of me growing up in my neighborhood.