Saturday, July 23, 2022

FIXER-UPPER

 


The search for home began in childhood.
White picket fences, milk bottles on doorsteps,
safe imagined domesticity,
made her cry.
As a young unhappy wife, she walked
city streets by the hour,
after dark,
looking in at the warmly-lit rooms
of others.
She still remembers a young woman
reading a book, looking up, smiling,
as a young man brought her a cup of tea.
Her wonderment, that such a life could be.

As a single mom of four, she pushed
baby buggies up and down country roads,
kibitzing women hanging washing
on the line, men washing their cars.
The dinner hour,
with all the fathers coming home,
was a hard time of day at first, until
she realized she was happier
and laughed more when it was
just her and the kids.

Finally, she managed
a home of her own - a run-down trailer
in a trailer park,
a total fixer-upper.
She rolled up her sleeves
and made it home.
By then she was joyously walking beaches
and forest trails.
It had taken half her life,
but she didn't have to
walk past rows of
other peoples' houses
any more.


12 comments:

  1. There can be so much searching when there is so much loss in a heart. This is beautiful Sherry, and I am so grateful that your story has such a wonderful and contented ending! Your journey has made you both strong but also tender. That always shows in your lovely poetry.

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  2. Gimme them forests and beaches. This is a wonderful, poignant, fun tale of reinvention — which isn’t always easy, but often life saving. BTW — I have finished the rennovations on my poem, if you want to revisit and check it out… 😉

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  3. Well guess who is the winner. You were courageous enough to search for a better life.Chapeau ! A beautiful sad poem that I think a lot women could relate to. Your poems are a comfort. I used to know a very wealthy woman who enjoyed going to hospital because someone brought her a cup of tea in bed.

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  4. Your poem speaks of love, resilience, courage and life well-lived. I like the last lines a lot, "but she didn't have to / walk past rows of / other peoples' houses / any more." A beautiful and tender write, Sherry!

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  5. This hit home--my nephew has been going through that looking-in-other-windows phase.

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  6. She didn't need all the things she'd witnessed to enjoy the simple but contented life she eventually gained. A heartwarming conclusion to a poignant tale.

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  7. Love your (real-life ?) message Sherry. Happiness isn't always where you expect to find it - it sounds like a difficult journey, but you knew when you arrived where you wanted to be. ❤️

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  8. Oh how we walk our unrest trying to find home. Happiness and joy arrives when we find the place we should be.

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  9. How happy i was to read of her rolled up sleeves and a place she called home
    Happy Sunday Sherry. Thanks fir dropping by to read mine

    Much💚love

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  10. Sherry, this is a sad life finally rescued, rescued by herself. I'd say I wasted 13 years of my life, but the four kids are worth any sacrifice with which I might be assessed. My three years of freedom and the next 49 years of marriage were great!!
    I didn't look into windows but rather rode my Vespa motorscooter or in the three years my Honda motorcycle for loooonng rides.
    ..

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  11. You are a strong woman, Sherry. No matter what life presented you, you managed to overcome. As a single mother you did well and made a home for your children. You were, and are, amazing!

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  12. The last four lines were a punch in the stomach and beautifully rendered. Tears. Your writing is always a journey and speaks to my soul.
    -Mimi Lenox

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