"One of your characters is a piece of furniture." I used to work for Peewee Herman. In a chair’s world, that’s becoming a god. On the show, Peewee talks to you like he’d talk to a human. You have lines to say in response. Peewee doesn’t talk to you in between filming, but I knew the man loved me like I loved him. Knew. It isn’t until years after the show ends and you stop watching the reruns that you put it all together: I had lines to say, but they weren’t chair lines, they were person lines coming through humanity’s most valuable player: the chair who wanted a seat at the table. You get an ego, think of yourself as a high chair, but every human who ever saw me still assumed I was their salvation should they be tired. My only rescue was having a reserved sign: they don’t sit on me because they’re afraid of disrespecting another human. That’s why I tell people Paul Reubens was just like his character Peewee Herman, because the closest claim I had to autonomy was to be reserved by someone benevolent. By Maxim Vinogradov Wildflowers sprout up beneath The deck chair you loved Still sitting where you left it You built this desk with your hands Its aspen veneer Peeling and stained with spilled ink We borrowed the chair That sits in the living room Too heavy to move You built my bed wrong It’s creaked since its conception It will creak always By Molly Burdick It's been lonely these days, at work. I sit in the corner of the room, waiting for customers to come in. It's hard, though. With COVID. Less people to drink coffee, less people to want to stay awhile. I miss the feeling of it. I miss the gentle scrape of my legs against the floor in anticipation of someone carrying a mug and a book. I miss the pressure in my back when someone finally sits down. Sitting, perched on my sturdy form, talking to someone or working on their laptop. I miss wondering if they'd stay in my embrace for a few minutes, or even hours at a time. I stay here, my rectangular wooden frame pressed back against the wall, wondering when I'll feel the warmth of a soul in my arms again. It could be days, could be longer. So I sit. And wait.
By Claire-Frances Sullivan
0 Comments
When first I awakened in the lungs of the Earth
and I first felt the Earth take a breath, I was not made of matter one could see or could touch, but I was thought that could see and could feel. So when I awakened in the lungs of the Earth and I first felt the Earth take a breath, the lungs expanded, so pink and so clean and contracted around me again. Nine hours an inhale and nine again out I soon felt a heartbeat join in. Somewhere within my amorphous self a beating had decided to start. Confused, I cried out with no vocal cords and the Earth so kindly responded. She shared her thoughts and I shared mine glad for some form of companion. As I was conscious in the lungs of the Earth and she was sharing her mind I began to feel oceans wash over my surface in time with the breaths of air. I could feel the land move cracking, shifting, shaking, releasing deep within my depths. Through the mind of the Earth I could feel the sun warming me so kindly as I turned. I could feel the blanket of warm air wrapped tightly, safely ‘round my body. I could feel, in the lungs of the Earth something growing something shaping something becoming a force of its own. I am awake in the lungs of the Earth and I am beginning to take a form. I don’t know what I am but I can see what I’m becoming and so, I think, can the Earth. She is beginning to fear me and as I grow eyes I weep for her demise. For as I grow a body like a cancer in her lungs she has less and less room to breathe. One day I’ll climb out wretched, pale, and caked with dirt, to cast shadows on the ground. I’ll dive in the oceans, I’ll stomp up the mountains, and perhaps take a breath of my own. By Laura McCullagh Leave the light on
when you go I want to see the cluttered desk I want to see the bed at rest I want to see the shelves of books I want to see the hanging hooks I want to see the empty chair [I want to see you sitting there] Leave the light on every night Just like you used to do And pull the shades closed, too The light inside is you by Molly Burdick |
AuthorWe are a group of multi-disciplinary writer-types who are committed to collective creation. Writing doesn't happen in a vacuum, it happens at a table. Archives
March 2021
Sort Posts
All
|