I have craved and coveted
until my throat closed with the
exhaustion of it. The same
goes for waiting. I foresaw
a certain future which did
not take place so I waited
until another future
rose up, brought lessons cruising
through the bedrooms of my days
like a Continental Town Car
(circa 1959). Usually, I prayed
to the God of Anguish, of
Melancholy and, usually,
the answer was NO. Love, sex,
politics, and how-much-wine-
is-too-much-wine––I studied
these things, ended up brooding
and bedeviled. I believe
I won the rosette* for First
Place in Ponderous Confused
Cogitation.
I would not win the rosette
today. These days I pray to
any God or Goddess who
will give me the time of day.
Usually the answer is NO.
Yesterday, my prayers involved
how I might untangle the
coercion, the ultimate
assault of ageing. True to
form, the answer was NO.
DATA UNAVAILABLE
AT THIS TIME. PLEASE TRY LATER
* a badge or ornament that is made of ribbon and folded in the shape of a rose; often given as an award.Martina Reisz Newberry’s books are Never Completely Awake (due out in 2017 from Deerbrook Editions), Where It Goes (Deerbrook Editions), Learning by Rote (Deerbrook Editions), Running with A Woman Like Her Hair on Fire(Red Hen Press), Lima Beans and City Chicken: Memories of the Open Hearth (E.P. Dutton &Co) Her work has been anthologized and widely published in the U.S. and abroad. She lives in Los Angeles with her husband, Brian Newberry, a media creative.