Lace and Ribbon
By Jessica Hulsey
I’ll pick my shortest dress with the lowest cut
just so you don’t have to imagine much.
I’ll roll my knee socks up high—
black ribbon and lace—
just so I can watch you tear them off.
I’ll put my lipstick on in my brightest red
just so you can watch me stain your skin.
I’ll wear my tallest heels
just so I can wear them to bed
when you put my laced legs
above your head.
You’ll lie back real slow
and want me to put on a show.
You’ll do, baby.
And the show’s on the road.
If I Had Gotten Out of School
By Myleena Sevin
I would have held your hand in mine, soft and clean,
Heard the rain hitting our umbrella,
Water pooling all around our feet,
Soaking us by the shins, plodding along;
Can’t stop now, car’s on the other side of the street,
I see it now, its green and blue with the front dented,
Cause you lost the side door on accident.
You keep my hand, soft and clean,
We’re crossing the street through murky puddles;
Before I get buckled into my seat,
Stick out my tongue and catch a drop,
Cold and clean before the engine starts,
Riding home with peppermint in the rainy air;
Except you’re alone, and I’ve never been there.
Ginkgo Tree
By Kathryn Brownfield
Green leaf a fragile fan
Fluttering in faint wind
Sparkling in reflected sun
Golden shawl will fall
To drop a yellow carpet
Older than the dinosaurs
A living fossil
Surviving without change
For Love
By Dejah Henson
I have endured and borne for love.
I have been abused, abandoned, and neglected; and,
I have been broken.
I have hemorrhaged real and invisible blood from my mind, my soul, my spirit, my heart, and my body.
I have walked alone.
...For Love
I have gone for days, with barely any sleep, and tears running from my eyes.
I have been criticized and judged;
I have given up my identity to the point of being inhuman.
I have made some of the best and worst decisions of my life.
...For Love
I have been an addict.
I have been a runaway.
I have seen things that people see only in movies.
I have slept in elevators, outside, in motels, or not slept at all.
…For Love
I have been to rehab.
I have been to jail.
I have gotten clean.
I have done this all before my 18th birthday.
…For Love
I have stayed clean.
I have had five children.
I have tried to do things different than my ancestors.
I have experienced life, on life’s terms, regardless of my plans.
…For Love
I have taken care of 5-7 people at a time.
I have been through divorce twice, then poverty.
I have lived in motels with my children.
I have sat in my car, wondering what I was going to do.
…For Love
I have been pregnant and heard, “There’s something wrong…!”
I have sat in an empty hospital room, after delivery, with nothing but a picture.
I have experience with machines like ECMO and ventilators.
I have had to leave my baby at the hospital every day, then come back every day.
…For Love
I have pumped breast milk, to be frozen, then thawed, and fed to my child through a tube.
I have learned about missing diaphragms, diseased lungs, brain cysts, hydrocephalus, bowel obstructions, and
ligated Carotid Arteries and Jugular veins.
I have had to learn how to work machines, give medications, and even breathe for my child when he quit breathing.
I have learned words like tracheostomy, Mic-Key Button, feeding pump, and Ambu-Bag.
…For Love
I have had people tell me I should let my child die, or that I should put him in a home and not listened to them.
I have had someone tell me that maybe I was too weak to take care of a baby with problems, because I cry too much.
I have watched people stare.
I have watched people ignore.
…For Love
I have called ambulances and traveled to neurosurgeons for love.
I have had to stay at hospitals for lengths of time.
I have had a small hospital in my home.
I have prayed and begged.
…For Love
I have watched blood coming out of places of the body that it should not.
I have cleaned up green bile, blood, and cerebral spinal fluid.
I have held my child in my arms while he screamed, shook, and chewed into his hand.
I have held him while he endured the pain with no narcotics.
…For Love
I have fought with doctors, nurses, specialists, teachers, fathers, myself, and God.
I have heard words like Deaf, Autistic, and possible brain damage.
I have watched my child endure more surgeries than anyone should ever have to endure.
I have counted 29 scars, from the top of his head to his groin
...For Love
I have let my child play outside on a beautiful day, thinking it was wonderful for him to not be in the hospital and
that it would make him strong;
I have memories of my daughter screaming that her brother is in the pool.
I have dropped the phone and ran to find him floating on the water.
I have screamed and cried, while I called 911 and I pushed on his chest.
…For Love
I have watched cops and DHS crawl over every inch of my mother’s property trying to figure out if someone had
killed him on purpose; Somehow I didn’t shoot myself in the head.
I have washed the dirt from his body. I prayed by his bedside, and made the decision turn off life support.
I have held my child in my arms as he breathed one last breath.
I have watched my best friend take my child from my arms and place him in a Coroner’s bag.
…For Love
I have had to wonder how a child can be in a box, instead of riding a bike.
I have held on to the ashes of my child, because I have no family plot and I didn’t want to leave him with strangers.
I have had someone ask me what type of font I would like on a child’s headstone.
I have blamed myself.
…For Love
I have walked through darkness so full of hate, bitterness, and madness, that I knew how monsters were made.
I have had to listen to people talk to me about how God has a purpose, and how God has a plan, without punching
anyone.
I have made sure that I use no drugs, drink no alcohol, and stay away from anti-depressants, so that I wouldn’t try to
kill myself with any of those things.
I have had to suffer several severe mental and emotional breakdowns throughout his life, then after his death;
But, I never gave up or ran away.
…For Love
I have screamed, yelled, and said and done things, when I was mentally unwell, that I regret.
I have had to beg, steal, and borrow courage deep, just for the will to live.
I have lain on the couch crying, deep into the night.
I have lost short term memory; and, I have suffered from mental confusion, slurred speech, and anxiety attacks,
because the trauma was so bad, that it was a brain injury.
…For Love
I have watched my other children struggle.
I have nursed headaches, stuffy noses, swollen tonsils, Autism, ADHD, Hepatitis C, flu, depression, bullying,
scraped knees, heart break, and grief, for my other children.
I have had to put everyone in counseling several times.
I have had to get up and learn to live again, for the sake of my children.
...For Love
I have been in Complex PTSD Trauma Therapy and Grief Counseling for over a year.
I have had to walk down inner roads and remember things that make me shake and puke.
I have had anxiety attacks, and insecure breakdowns, when PTSD gets triggered; but, I have not given up.
I have had to learn to socialize in new ways.
…For Love
I have stayed up late into the night talking life and death with my children, answering questions and holding them.
I have done my best to help them rebuild; and, to begin to live in a way that was not possible when their brother,
then Mother, was sick. We are all learning to laugh, talk, and live again.
I have had to find strength, courage, faith, hope, beauty, and gratitude again.
I have to keep trying.
...For Love
Tulsa
By Brianna Sanow
Tulsa
I’ve winked at you from across the bar
Since I was a child
Still you refuse to buy me a drink
Tulsa
You taught me how to rip my own heart out
And hurl it into the pigs’ trough
The watery patches of your thirsty river
Reflect the sky that frowns on you
Tulsa
I learned who I want to be
And how I could never be her
While walking your littered streets,
Immersed in the inky darkness supplied by the thieves
Who cut out your copper wires
Tulsa
Your people dig shared needles into their impoverished skin
And they will outlast their teeth
Eventually Jack will stop playing his guitar
And your people will clap to the sound of their boredom
Tulsa
I will leave you in my pregnancy
Seeded with the bastard memory
Of your tempered form
And I will never look back
Until I have to
Tulsa
You femme fatale, you have an enchantment
A gravity that pulls us back
It squelches the wanderlust bubbling in our blood
And makes you so hated
Yet so loved all at once
For we all relish in affection for the barren
And we all eventually return for one more reach up your skirt
Breakfast with Billy Collins
By Jane Gibson
Struck dumb in the stacks
I gape and inhale
the essence of Billy Collins.
Succinct words crowd the car seat
follow me home
pile on the oak kitchen table.
Lines blur the anthem,
fall from my lips.
The alto on my right cuts her eyes
at me, frowns, as I sing
alleluia to God
for a poet’s concise perfect words.
I knit them into purple wool mittens,
scrawl them in green ink
on the grocery list alongside
mlk, s-dried tom and crrts.
Eat them in cereal
from a box of recycled cardboard,
then peer from my window in
frank emulation
and searching the sunrise find
pithy words that I own,
untasted by his lips,
not mentioned by his pen.
Aerodynamics
By Stephen Boyd Cates
If you were as aerodynamically
Designed as a yellow and black bumblebee,
You’d find it as difficult as it could be
To fly, since it’s not a poss-i-bil-i-ty.
The scientists tell us the bee cannot fly
For reasons profusely expounded from high.
Maintained by these lawyers of physics, they cry,
“The bee is too heavy!” His feat they deny!
And if you, perchance, should peruse bumblebees
On wing flying nimbly, don’t fall to your knees,
For, Einstein and Newton, the bees know not these;
They just know to fly with the greatest of ease.
So, take to the wing and do not let them say
That you cannot do it, that you must obey;
Remember the bee buzzing by on his way,
Through ignorance he flies and does to this day.
The Truth Behind True Love
By Sydney Pittsinger
We spoke in song titles, communicated via marker and mirror, and encouraged each silly aspiration. He knew when to hold me and when to back off. I knew how to make him smile on his worst day. He was liked by everyone because he was accepting, never judging. I would ask him stupid questions like what his superpower would be or what his favorite quote was. He would surprise me often, both romantically and casually.
One night I came home to a trail of red rose petals leading to the bed, which had a handwritten letter just explaining why he was glad to have me in his life and that he was sorry he had to work late that night. Our first date was on an empty golf course at about midnight playing football. We talked under the stars about stupid stuff, stalling that first kiss. When we kissed and I closed my eyes, it was like the stars were exploding. This dynamic attraction and care for each other lasted for more than 3 years, after which we started to make mistakes. We took each other for granted.
It is all of the great things that I remember most about my first love. I am not talking about my high school first love, because that was just a learning experience that taught me a lot and demanded that I build a tall, thick wall around my feelings. I am talking about the man who was able to crumble that wall with his laugh, his smile, and his company. I remember the day I finally admitted and truly knew that I loved him. I woke up after he had gone to work and decided to write it on a piece of paper. Instead of just giving it to him, I would take a picture of it on a disposable camera we had and he would be surprised after we developed it. I thought it would be great. We would go through all the memories of that film and then he would see that.
It didn’t happen that way. I left for New York for a week to visit my sister and he developed the film while I was away.
There was no hesitation; he loved me too.
Our falling out happened gradually, during our last year together. When I had finally opened my eyes enough to see him falling away, it was too late. I am not saying that he was the only one falling away; I am saying that for the first time he was not pulling me in. I did not leave him for another man. I moved in with a couple of friends and took on a busy routine of working overtime, CrossFit, and sleep. I had no motivation to do this; I was numb and needed something to take my mind off of him.
I didn’t know exactly why I was adamant about not going back to a man that had loved me and I had loved so completely. I just listed a bunch of petty reasons that seemed important to me at the time. I see now what he lacked in my eyes that ended our relationship. He was perfectly happy being halfway done with school and continuing to be a restaurant manager. It seemed to be working out just fine for us. I had stopped pursuing my educational goals as well. I even started to not worry about being a server forever. We were happy with each other and didn’t need anything else. Except, I did. I saw myself as my mother—with no education, no job experience, and on the streets with children because he would go back to drugs. This was not an immediate revelation; it was a fleeting thought when I decided to accept reality. I realized that love isn’t enough to build a life on.
It took a lot of dating around to come across the type of person I could stand to be around. You see, my ex had spoiled me so much that no one else could compare. That had become the issue; I was comparing every man to my ex.
The beginning of my new relationship was very tough and had a lot of issues, but he was, I determined, who I wanted to be with. He has a degree, works out, has a house, has a car and a good job. He always has a new project to work on at the house and I am not the center of his world. I am part of his world, and he has become a part of mine. The communication is verbal and took some getting used to, and he always brings my aspirations back to reality rather than encouraging me to pursue them. Now I am back in school and looking into several career options. I have a good-paying job with good benefits and have lived in his house for more than 2 years compared to moving once a year to a new apartment since I was 18. There are memories we literally built in this house, and for the first time I have a place I call home.
Love is not enough, because this is not a fairytale world or a Hollywood movie. Attraction can fade, but respect and communication will build a solid foundation for a lasting relationship. Attraction is not love. You can be attracted to someone, but loving is a learning process that involves understanding each other’s flaws and staying committed when situations get tough. Love is portrayed by actions and acceptance of one another, which express more than a four-letter word.
This Is Our Fault
By John David Ira
The fact that I can scroll through the news every day and be all but guaranteed that a new high-profile shooting has occurred is pure torture.
We perpetuate a society where mental illness is treated as either a crime or remedied by a simple pill. Memories of abuse and severe trauma are left unattended to boil in the back of our minds while we shuffle through our demanding—albeit underpaid—jobs hopped up on every pill we can find to supplement our insatiable escapism in between reality TV episodes. We won’t ever be encouraged to work through our problems because you can’t put a price tag on healthy people. Afraid that someone will 5150 us, we hide our depression and anxiety to a point of isolation. We change our mannerisms and behavior to disguise the fact that we are slowly falling apart inside. Then, we laugh at the lunatic screaming at a shopping cart out in front of Wal-Mart because it makes us feel less crazy.
In this cyclical culture of fear and death, we immortalize names like McVeigh, Bin Laden, and James Holmes while little about the victims ever sparks our interest. We watch for teen pop stars to turn into train wrecks and hope for long-term, high-profile marriages to be disastrous. We click on links about murder, rape, bigotry, and racism, not to seek knowledge, but to drink up the controversy—to absorb the gore through our eyes. We let monolithic media hubs capitalize on this and feed us fattening spoonfuls of distorted facts being manipulated into sensationalist headlines. We still keep clicking because we are obsessed.
We suppress our children’s intelligence and curiosity by taking windows out of our schools and forcing conformity to standards and metrics that they barely comprehend. We tell them that because they don’t learn how we need them to, they need to do it all over again. We preach individuality, but only when it falls within what we consider culturally normal. We tell them that they are wrong even when they are right, because HEAVEN FORBID that they be smarter than ANY adult. We continue to defund music and art programs to pay for beefed up curriculum to pass state testing for grants and funds. Meanwhile, children and families get paper cuts from pushing fundraisers and collecting box tops just so that their kids can have a textbook or lunch. All of this so that they can graduate at 18 with little or zero knowledge about how to balance a checkbook, get a job, or otherwise survive in this world.
We allow ourselves to be fed like cattle. With corn and wood pulp fillers permeating our foods, we rely on cheese dust and sugar as our primary food groups. We let companies lie to us about our foods and their contents. Foods that cause obesity, can increase stress levels, can lead to heart disease or cancer, foods that depress and elate us and then throw us into irregular sleep schedules that cause paranoia and anxiety. Then we take a pill for that.
We shame people like Rachel Dolezal into oblivion. We mock them and make examples out of them. We hurl vicious insults on social media, make crude “tra**y this” and “nig**r that” jokes like it’s nothing. We are willing to drag people’s mistakes or differences out into the spotlight where we pick apart every word they’ve said, every accomplishment they’ve had and everything they’ve done until a sufficient label of “hypocrite,” “sicko,” “liar,” “bigot,” “thug,” “fruitcake,” “conspiracy theorist,” “feminazi,” or likewise is attached PERMANENTLY. We publicly stone people to death with our words, and sometimes actual stones. Then we tell them to kill themselves in the comments section.
We let our veterans, our homeless, our hungry, and our abused all rot in the streets. Our veterans struggle to find jobs or secure basic health care and our abused children run in and out of foster homes. We pass off the homeless as irresponsible drunks while we march to the nearest TGI Friday’s bar. We consider our downtrodden to be that way because they are weak, not because they were powerless in their own downfall or came on hard times. We put people on welfare, food stamps, and other assistance programs just below rapists and murderers on our morality scale with little thought as to what got them there. Humanity has disappeared and has been replaced with disgust and disregard for the suffering of man.
This is not Obama.
This is not the Illuminati.
This is not the Gay Agenda.
This is not ISIS, terrorism, religious extremists, money, guns, oil prices, “kids these days,” the internet or Donald Trump…
THIS IS OUR FAULT.
We are this way because we allow it. We are this way because someone told us “it is the way it is” and “one person can’t change the world.” We have been told not to question our government, but to be suspicious of our communist spy neighbors. We have had the American Dream preached to us since birth through tales of self-bootstrap-pulling and coal miners turned diamond moguls while children sit in overcrowded classrooms with their futures pointing towards prison as their only alternative.
The people alive today may have not created this disastrous system; however, we continue to fuel it. From birth, we are shaped by our culture and society. We are forced into a learning mold, penalized for stepping out of it, released into a world we know little about, forced to make big money for other people while we scrape by on the little money we make breaking our backs 40 hours MINIMUM a week. We do this for decades of our lives only to be chastised publicly and privately for every mistake we make, ignored when things are going good and silenced every time we ask for a little help. We let our system consume us with hatred, anger, suspicion, fear, depression, exhaustion—all of the above, so that it can keep churning out more darkness.
And from without springs the twisted soul that is human. Beaten, bruised, molded, broken, remolded, stifled, oppressed, isolated, sick, angry, and armed—human becomes monster.
How can we really expect to move forward when we let ourselves be trapped by a failing system? We have done nothing but dismiss our “hose on the ground” society with a “what a shame” or “well look at that.” WE CANNOT MOVE FORWARD UNTIL WE CHANGE. We cannot evolve until we let our poorly constructed idea of civilized society fall away.
Until then, people will still be shot. Parents will struggle with explaining intruder drills to their kids. Minorities will still be treated as second class. We will pollute our bodies and minds with unnecessary chemicals and foods that deteriorate our bodies. We will defame innocent people. We will stifle individuality, praise fear, and ignore the suffering of others. Until then, this will continue to be OUR FAULT.
We must change—our survival as a species depends on it.
Hey, Dad
By Troy McCloughan
I drive west on I-90 in western New York. I turn off the music, a firm finger to the button that I hope is visible from the backseat where my daughters sit. Alyssa at twenty years old continues honoring the half-time custody schedule; I usually describe her as “my adult daughter,” and she’s behind me. Rachel will be fifteen next month and, as usual in this traveling mode, sits next to Alyssa on the rear passenger seat. They are quiet. Though this is typical because they often sleep most of the vacation drive, they are awake.
I have been thinking, contemplating, and forming my argument since we left our overnight stay in Rochester about twenty minutes ago. I am hurt, angry, frustrated. I have—as I know not to do—compiled a list of complaints since we left our home in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, five days ago, July 1st, for a road trip to Boston. I imagine myself a volcano that has given a few burps and is ready to wreak havoc and devastation on its surroundings—in my case, my daughters.
And, I know better: don’t explode on this trip.
I have driven two thousand miles and we have another thousand before we are home late tomorrow night. I am tired; I am emotionally exhausted. Since pulling into Boston late morning Wednesday, July 3rd, we have spent three days walking and sightseeing—a constant cultural and historical three-day sponging. That was the plan, that’s how we vacation.
“It’s really hurtful when I put a lot of energy into something and you two complain,” I say. My voice is loud but my filter is capping the volume.
No response.
It is a vague, macro comment, but after my outburst while packing the trunk earlier as we left the Best Western, they shouldn’t be surprised.
Last night, I was overwhelmed. My predicament: We wanted to attend the Vans Warped Tour music festival in Buffalo today. The farther west we drove, the closer we were for the gate opening at 11 a.m. But I was exhausted and Syracuse seemed the best stop. Driving twenty minutes away from I-90 and into Syracuse at about 11:30 p.m., I pulled into a convenience store to use phone apps for securing overnight accommodations. The rates were too high or the comment said something like “Check with our individual participants.” I was close to tears, having driven five hours after spending the day in Boston. I would have to keep driving and it was close to midnight.
So I don’t remember if I asked Alyssa to help reserve a room in Rochester using the phone app or if she volunteered. She’s my middle child, the balance between her siblings. She accommodates, maintains peace, and disregards her own emotions until the needed task is complete.
I drove. Leaning over the console, she reviewed hotels, read a few guest summaries, and we made a decision. She populated the required information and I handed her my credit card to complete the transaction. We pulled into the hotel well after 1 a.m.
This morning at 10 a.m., I packed the car trunk. I eliminated one cooler’s service by dumping the water, loading it with warm drinks, and pushing it deep into the trunk. And this became the conflict catalyst. Alyssa made a comment that I heard as disappointment, then Rachel contributed her own color commentary supporting her sister.
That was it! The first wave of emotion erupted in the hotel parking lot. The seismic graph registered.
I am aware when my own emotional triggers are tripped by another’s words of disappointment because of my actions, and I am aware of the need to quiet the chaotic internal monologue that follows. These two together—if not kept in control—have long-lasting consequences.
A year and a half ago, Rachel and I sat in counseling together due to the event eight months earlier known as “Dad kicked us out of the apartment.” Though I would label it more like “I sent you back to your mom’s for the weekend.” I was hurt by their nagging and complaining at me and about me. Chris the counselor said I overreacted, and I conceded his assessment.
In the hotel parking lot I said something similar to “if I’m packing the trunk, then no one gets to complain.” (I know I said more, but I have a family vacation theory that goes something like this: No matter how horrible the vacation, families will later add a nostalgic lens that shades the hell endured.)
I left them to close the trunk and slid into the car.
Other than usual road noises and with the radio still silent, the car is quiet. I need to verbalize with specificity, so I methodically communicate the list: complaints of hotel choices, complaints of Boston heat, and complaints of packing.
Rachel finally says that she’s helped carry luggage. I tell her Rochester was the first time.
No response.
Alyssa has complained but not at the frequency of Rachel, so in a moment of conscious clarity, I feel the need to qualify some statements.
“It’s mainly Rachel, but, Alyssa, you just complained about the packing.”
“I was just making a comment,” she says, her voice matter-of-fact.
A few silent miles pass. I need to tell them how all of this makes me feel. I didn’t learn this initially from Chris the counselor, but from a couple’s therapy book Brenda and I have read out loud together and applied to our relationship since we started dating two-and-a-half years ago.
“It hurts me when I spend a lot of time and energy planning our vacation. I have literally spent weeks researching hotels and sites. So when I hear a lot of complaining, it hurts me.” I pause. How does this make me feel? “It makes me want to take my own vacations by myself. I really enjoy our time together, but it’s not enjoyable when there’s a lot of complaining.” I pause. “I don’t really want to do it alone, but I would save a lot of money and I would do what I wanted.”
Chris the counselor encouraged Rachel to express her feelings. I guess she’s still working on that at this point. We are a family of silence. We don’t inherently bear the responsibility of creating conversation when there is none. But right now, I really want them to speak to me. At least maybe an uh huh or I don’t know. Alyssa will remain silent, she’ll hear what I say, she’ll shrug this off, and we will enjoy the music festival soon after we arrive; Rachel will remain silent, she won’t acknowledge what I say, she will hold onto this conflict for a while. It might be hours before she and I share words.
“Why should I not drive home from here?” I need to clarify. “Why shouldn’t I just drive home now?”
I’ve slipped into the unfair, extreme parental threats. I have no intention of driving home and skipping the music festival. Yes, it was a brief momentary thought, but it never had the chance of becoming reality: I know Alyssa really wants to attend, I really want to attend, and I really do not have the stamina to drive eighteen hours straight through to get home. And, yet, I said it, suggested it.
I turn to Rachel and repeat my exaggerated threat, emphasizing that it’s a question.
“I don’t know,” she says, frustrated but not emphatic.
We had a similar exchange two summers ago between Portland and Seattle on the way to my brother’s house. We had been in Los Angeles five days with my high school best friend, then two nights tent camping in the Redwoods. Rachel had been complaining, short with her responses, negative with her words. My voice maxed the small economy sedan space as Alyssa remained silent and Rachel finished texting her mom so that I could take her phone as discipline for her behavior.
“Give it to me,” I hollered.
“Hold on,” she said, attempting to match my volume, recent tears glistening her cheeks.
The traffic slows at the festival’s highway exit and vehicles form a tortoise moving line. I recognize my own emotional progress: I am not hollering. It’s close to eleven o’clock; the gates will open soon. Because the musical acts draw daily for stage playing times, I’m hoping the girls don’t miss the maturing boy band they have followed a few years since its being introduced on the Disney channel—the girls planned their own road trip last summer to see the band in Oklahoma City.
In less than an hour, we park and approach the ticket booth. Alyssa steps forward, pays for her ticket; she’s covered some of her expenses this vacation. I buy tickets for me and Rachel. I extend one ticket toward Rachel; she says thanks and I hear a softened tone contrasting her typical emotionally heightened voice mid-conflict. And this revised tone isn’t surprising or uncommon as part of the conflict descent; she seems to sincerely thank me for what I’m doing.
The girls step into the first line. I scan, then walk for the shortest line, but I don’t look back for them, and I am beyond the gate much quicker. I don’t want to be around them when I feel this way—unappreciated, frustrated.
What would they think if I kept walking and didn’t wait? I would be alone and could blame the crowds for me losing them.
Just inside is the Ernie Ball stage, a large easel-like board with band names and performance times, and professionally painted canopies displaying band names that line the perimeter and umbrella band merchandise. Due to the congested crowds that move with eager anticipation, the atmosphere is similar to a carnival midway, though I do not see or smell food.
The girls approach but we do not speak. We stand on the warming pavement, shifting our bodies to glance at our surroundings. The girls have attended music concerts since I initiated those five years ago with an Oklahoma City road trip to see a boy band, but we have never experienced a music festival. It’s awkward: there’s been recent conflict and we should be happy and talkative. Since there was no discussion in the car, we have no plan for the day.
I’m still hurt, so I’m hoping they ask when we should meet tonight so we can be apart for a while. It’s possible we’ll be here nine hours, depending on when their band plays and how much energy we have.
Alyssa speaks: “Do you see any other stages?”
I turn, nod, and walk toward another stage. Rachel maintains distance following me.
The band apologizes for technical difficulties. There are two drummers facing each other in the middle of the stage, a female keytar player, and a male guitar player who begins singing.
We’ve been under the hot sun since Boston and today continues the trend. The recent New York rains provide accompanying humidity, lending to an oppressive heat.
I remove my orange Ohio State Fair 2012 knit backpack and dig for sunscreen. I apply it to my face, neck, arms. I offer it to the girls. Rachel shakes her head, Alyssa dabs a little.
Alyssa wants to find more stages, so I follow them. I lag behind, stop to assess the alcohol options: one twenty-four-ounce craft beer is twelve dollars, a shot of whiskey is eight dollars, and a premium shot of whiskey is ten dollars. Looks like a good reason to remain hydrated by using the festival’s free filtered water station.
I don’t see the girls. Do they want to lose me? How will they feel if I don’t look for them? I walk in the direction I last saw them. They come back to me. We see a large stage where national touring acts perform. Large permanent tarps cover the stage and seats. Though we haven’t been standing long, the heat and sunshine continue to sap my energy.
Alyssa walks into the women’s restroom. Rachel and I stand, though not close together. We haven’t spoken since she didn’t know if I should drive home rather than attend this event and her thank you at the ticket booth. Teenagers walk around us in both directions. I am easily three times the age of many of the concertgoers surrounding me.
The stage is identified by two separate banners, and a band plays on half of the large stage. Each half-stage will have alternating thirty-minute performances. The girls’ favorite band today and the reason they wanted to come will play at 7:15. We sit in shaded seats.
Later, we venture, looking for the stages we haven’t located. The girls follow me close as we weave through bodies. I hear fast, guitar-heavy music and see a large accompanying crowd. We walk the standing audience’s perimeter, then hug the crowd to avoid narrow foot traffic lanes.
Three young males—teens to young adult—stand arm’s distance in front of me. One holds a bottle of Gatorade and looks at the older male, who smirks, reaches for the bottle, drains a quarter of the fluid, hands it back. Bottle in hand, the other rears back and catapults the bottle toward the stage, fluid streaming from the bottle as it descends into the crowd.
I’m dumbfounded. I look for security, scan for the posted signs I noticed earlier suggesting send-a-text-message to a specific number if you see disruptive behavior. I want to shake the teen by his shoulders, tell him people could get hurt. I want to ask the leader why he would instigate such a thing. But I’m acutely aware of my forty-seven-year-old body possibly being pummeled by three much younger and larger males not appreciating my parental-like intervention. I’m also wearing my eye glasses, which means one fist to my face and with damaged glasses, I will not see the Google map on the entire drive home, assuming shards of lens do not permeate my eyes and I’m not riding home in the backseat with emergency room patches covering my eyes. I pass on the teaching moment.
We find another stage with a band. We stand beyond the crowd. The music stops.
The male singer breathes heavily. He says, “We are the generation!” The crowd roars. “We don’t listen to anyone else.” More crowd response.
I like that: positive empowerment energy, an enthusiastic crowd. Now, I’m focusing on the singer.
“My dad abandoned me; fuck him.” The crowd is alive. I like it, I get it, I understand.
“Fuck him and fuck that generation.”
Yeah, I agree, reject that authority. The crowd increases the verbal approval.
Wait! He’s talking about me—my generation.
Behind me, Rachel says, “Uh huh.”
I turn, she’s smiling, maybe smirking. She relates, she connects. Does she think when he says “abandoned” that she imagines I did that to her when I sent them to their mom’s that weekend?
Or was it the divorce?
I just spent money for two tickets and brought my daughters here. What does the singer mean fuck me? I have bought my own Vans shoes and my daughters’ Vans shoes. I’m helping support this festival, which means I’m supporting that singer who despises my generation.
Four years ago, the Australian rock band Jet released their third album, which contained the song “Hey Kids.” Though the song’s lyrics do not address father abandonment, a similar child-to-parent complaint is registered when the adult child chastises his Baby Boomer father for changing his values rather than the world.
Alyssa says, “Let’s stand together. “
I’m not sure what she wants. She has her phone in one hand and waves the three of us together with her free hand. “Face each other,” she says. She holds the phone chest high, centers it between us, aims it toward our feet, taps the phone screen for a picture, looks at the display, and says, “Okay.”
“I want to find the ‘Reverse Daycare,’” I say. It’s a resting place for the parents who bring kids. We walk, stop at booths, look at merchandise, and eventually find the parent tent. The dark green canopy walls hang to the ground and one corner peels upward as I approach. A female volunteer not much older than Alyssa waves me inside. I turn and nod at the girls, tell them to stay in contact with me.
I lower me head and step inside. The tent is quiet and dark. She asks if I want a water refill, if I want a Monster drink. I accept the first, decline the second. Folded metal chairs surround a large television monitor, which fills the corner of the room. Most chairs are occupied. Some parents watch the monitor; some have heads back, eyes closed, and mouths agape.
I gaze at the monitor and recognize The Breakfast Club movie. The girls and I have watched this at home. They discovered it through the music and mention in one of their teen films. I immediately recall the many scenes where the detention students reveal—when pushed by peers—the emotional and physical conflict with their parents. Claire says her parents don’t give a shit about her. John imitates the verbal assaults from his parents. Andrew says about his father, “God, I fucking hate him. He’s like this mindless machine that I can’t even relate to anymore.”
Still standing, I thank the volunteer for the water refill and leave.
I find the girls at the main stages and we relax in the stadium chairs. We eat a little. I get a message on my phone that my dad who gave up parental rights when my mom remarried over forty years ago has succumbed to cancer. The message is from his daughter, my younger half-sister I’ve known about for thirty years but never met or saw in person until last summer after finding her through social media.
When I was fifteen, my grandmother, at my request and after my mom’s consent, helped me initiate what would become sporadic contact: a few letters and a phone call every fifteen years. But I never saw him until Rachel and I visited last summer. The girls and I are maybe four hours away from them in Ohio, having had plans to stop there and visit tomorrow. My half-brother soon texts that he is too busy helping his step-mom with funeral arrangements to see us.
Tears collect along my eyelids. I feel guilty, having assumed my dad had a couple years to live based on my research of his diagnosis and treatment, having put off seeing him until our way home rather than on our way to Boston, having not given Alyssa the opportunity to meet him. Maybe it is regret that I didn’t try a little harder or that I didn’t make him or his family a priority. I know that everyone will tell me that he made the decisions that kept us separated and that he never attempted to see me or my family.
Maybe I just wanted to see him one more time; maybe I wanted Rachel to see him again and Alyssa to meet him.
We are not being invited to the funeral. I need to get the girls back to their mom’s, so we don’t have the days to spare anyway. But I’m not asked and actually feel I’m being encouraged to stay away. I will finally look online about two months later for the obituary. No mention of me, his first child, or my kids.
I am not only nameless; I do not exist in that world.
I hand my phone to the girls, let them read the messages. Rachel communicates consolation concerning the event. The girls have questions about the funeral, the tentative plans to stop and see the family.
I text and message my siblings condolences, offer encouraging words. Their responses express the struggle of losing their father.
Soon after the girls see their band, we walk to the car through the soggy field, dodging puddles. I am tired; we are tired. But we are chatty, discussing the next overnight stop, the drive home tomorrow, the music we enjoyed.
We rearrange the car, get ourselves comfortable. I use my phone and check email. I have a notification that Alyssa has tagged me on Facebook. I look at the picture she took hours earlier. It’s our six feet, toes pointing to each other.
Her publicly accompanying comment notes, “A family that Vans together, stays together.”