Sunday, December 30, 2018

For Jaxon

Three days ago, my mom's cousin and his wife and two sons were in a horrific car accident, and the oldest son passed away. The father and the younger brother were transported to the hospital, and for a long while, we were unsure whether they would survive or not. By the grace of God, they did, but my cousin's death shook the family, especially because he was so young.
It arrives as a full-bodied shock when we hear of a family member passing away, but said shock is intensified when death blindsides us. Considering this for the past few days, I realized that this is the first encounter, at lease concerning my family, where someone hale and healthy died. Everyone else lived full and long lives, dying of either old age or a long-term illness that provided us time to prepare and say our goodbyes.
Nothing like that happened with Jaxon, and although I didn't know him as well as I would have liked (his family lives several states away and we don't have the opportunity to visit them often), my heart still grieves, and it probably will for a long time.
This is for you, Jaxon--a celebration of your life.


Pretending to know or understand your plan is absurd.
I don’t know.
I can’t know.
I won’t even attempt to surmise
What you’re thinking when you act.
It’s futile.
Vanity.
And utterly exhausting—
Beyond everything in my meager capability to fathom.
So I won’t ask why tragedy occurs
Out of the blue, blindsiding all of us.
I won’t ask why you allow the
Young,
Innocent, 
Children
To die without reaching adulthood.
We say they possessed so much potential.
Possessed.
Past-tense. 
Potential.
Future implications of a goal or thing 
Not yet reached.
Yet you know, and I know, that we label things
Incorrectly and inerrantly wrong.
See, the young met their potential.
They lived their full life,
Touched,
Loved,
Lived.
And were loved dearly in return. 
They never fail to reach their potential.
They never fail to live their lives in the fullest,
However short they may be.
We speak of their lives as being snapped
By the cruelty of the
Fates,
Norns,
Moirai.
The threads of life trimmed.
Although I cannot begin to explain or understand
What you think or your reasons,
I know that all lives, however long or short,
Bear the same weight,
Purpose,
And meaning:
To glorify you and show others how to
Love,
Laugh,
Live. 
By fulfilling those things, there is no potential wasted,
No cutting short the thread.
There are only the sweet years complete
With the loving and the living.


~Abigail Blair

Saturday, December 15, 2018

The Mask - A Short Story I Wrote in High School

I have a blog post today! My phone so thoughtfully reminded me a minute ago as I forgot due to the mayhem and insanity that has been the last couple months. Update on life: I passed all my classes this semester and am now a senior in college set to graduate next December; my husband and I are preparing to celebrate our first Christmas together; the editor for Trill! Magazine hired me to work for them over the summer; and thanks to the incredible book, 400 Writing Prompts my friend and coworker gave me as a Secret Santa gift, I have an idea for a new dystopian book! I think it has potential to turn into something great. Besides all of that, I am still attempting to work my way through outlining my novel, for which I thought up a new (and exceedingly better) title yesterday evening. Since I have not written much save a few poems here and there since October, I decided to post a short story about redemption I wrote while in high school called The Mask. I hope you enjoy it!

(Book from Piccadilly Inc.)

The mask lay on her dressing table. It was beautiful by the standards of the townsfolk, covered in bright colours and radiated joy and happiness. Reluctantly, she stared at herself in the mirror. Her heart ached and her eyes shone with tears and hidden pain. Every flaw in her life stared at her and she shuddered with repulsion at the ugliness underneath. She touched the mask and slipped it on her face, hiding every emotion deep within her.
She gave a false smile and walked into the town as if she were as carefree and as joyful as her mask portrayed. Around her, people went about their daily jobs and duties, smiling behind their masks. The painted colours displayed beauty and perfection; these people clearly had everything they desired and were pleased in what and who they were.
But she felt dirty and fake.
She smiled at her friends and family, but inside her, beneath the mask, she wept. Her heart was empty and she had nowhere to run. No one to turn to.
Then a young man caught her eye. He had no mask, and his simple smile was warm and genuine. His face was plain in comparison to the vibrant colours of the masks around him, but she saw something about him that was truly beautiful. Then he turned and looked at her.
Their eyes met, and she looked away, ashamed, for she felt his gaze boring into her. She knew he saw the emptiness behind her mask and was afraid. But her fascination in him drew her closer. He still stared at her with loving eyes, and she knew he was not someone to fear.
Timidly, she made her was across the street toward him. A crowd had formed around the young man and was listening to him speak. His voice, tender but strong, pulsed through her. He spoke of things unheard of in her town. He spoke of freedom and forgiveness, of life without a mask. The townsfolk scoffed at his words and moved away, but she stayed, alone with the man.
Suddenly she was shy, and tried to move with the crowd. Then a gentle hand touched her arm, stopping her. It was the man. She stared at his hands, for on his wrists were two scars.
He taught her about life without a mask. A life without pain or heartache. A life free from the ugliness that haunted her. Tears filled her eyes and rolled down her face under her mask. Gently, the man reached behind her hair and removed it. She quickly covered her face with her hands; afraid he might see and know the truth. But he only smiled.
Slowly, ever so slowly, she took her hands away, revealing her true self. His eyes stared with forgiveness and love into her own eyes, eyes filled with sadness. He whispered two words to her. Two simple words that made all the difference to her.
She felt as if a weight had been lifted from her, and her heart was no longer empty and she no longer felt pain, but peace. She smiled, not falsely this time, but truly smiled. He reached out one of his scarred hands, and in it was her mask, now appearing dull and shabby. She took it from him, and with one last look, left. He had seen her for what she truly was under her mask. He had shared her pain and he had healed her broken heart. He had forgiven her. She put her mask away and never wore it again. Never again, because he had called her beautiful.






Have a lovely weekend, and I'll see you in two weeks with a new poem or two!
~Abigail Blair

Saturday, August 18, 2018

When My Female Returns: A Short Story from Jemma the Tuxedo Cat


Boy With a Bear Tattoo, though almost finished, is not quite there yet, but to clear the fluff in my head in the meantime, I took my husband's advice and wrote a short story from my cat, Jemma's, point of view. What resulted is what lies below, and it is hopefully humorous and relatable for all the cat owners or feline enthusiasts who happen to read this blog! This is also the most ridiculous story I've ever composed in my years of writing, so here's to the utter absurdity below! 

Let me know what you think in the comments, and have a happy weekend! 
~Abigail




WHEN MY FEMALE RETURNS

My favorite part of the day is when the Female returns home. The Male is okay, but he adores me less than the Female, so I prefer her. Also, the Female raised me from youngling to the equivalent of an adolescent, so she and I share a bond established the day she adopted me from my foster family.
She and I were inseparable, save for the agonizing times when she invited other Males and Females of various sizes and speaking at various detestable volumes over to our sanctuary; I quickly learned to recognize the sound of the bell that signals the arrival of one such Male or Female violating our home. When I hear the sound, or as it happens these days (the bell mercifully has not sounded since moving homes) an unfamiliar knocking sounds on the door, I scurry away as quickly as possible and seek refuge beneath the bed. From my spot down the hall, I watch them, but Males and Females are terribly boring and dull to observe. They sit. Or they stand around. Or they eat. And they jabber incessantly all the while about nothing significant, like the fact that they are disturbing my solitude with my Female. But she waves at me from down the hall from time to time. I see her but pretend not to notice.
She should not have opened our doors to such strangers without my permission. We talked about this at least a dozen times.
She knows this.
Then she brought home the Male and disappeared for a while, so I settled for the smaller Female that lived with us in the sanctuary with many rooms and many beds to hide beneath and many doors to hide behind and leap out at my older brothers. The Black one was my favorite to disturb; the colorful words that flew with the spittle from his mouth put the rainbow to shame. He hated me. I enjoyed him. The Brown one played along for a while until he tired and screamed at me to leave him alone. I didn’t, of course. Where’s the fun in that? The Orange one…well…the Orange one had some mental problems of his own, and I sensed his Female loved him out of pity than for his obviously lacking brains. He was what the Females call “sweet,” I think, although why they use flavor words to describe us disturbs me. Whatever they say, we are not sweet.
I wondered about the other one I smelled from time to time, the female of my kind whose faint and fading scent I occasionally caught on the blanket, window pillow, and some of my older toys given to me on the day of my adoption. But I thought little of it. I still think little of it, but sometimes my Female hugs me close and doesn’t let me go for a while; I tolerate this, sensing that she is upset or even, I think, sad. She cries sometimes when she sees that blanket we left behind in the move or when she sees me doing something particular, although I never know exactly what. Maybe it reminds her of that missing female. I do what I can for her when she gets like that, though I don’t understand it. But I try to cheer her up when I can.
Back to what I was saying; the Female brought home a Male, then they vanished except the days and afternoons she came to see me. She laid out on her floor surrounded by papers that crinkled when I walked on them, and I assumed my spot beside her, between her arms, or stretched across one or more pieces of the crinkly paper until she shooed me away so she might examine it. Didn’t she know I was comfortable?
The Orange one’s Female and the Black one’s smaller female took care of me during that time. The smallest Female of the household was less fun; she constantly invaded my personal space. Some people have no bubbles. I put up with her, though, as my burden to bear. She wasn’t all bad, not all the time.
Then one day my Female returned, placed me in a box with small holes to peer out of and a wire door I pressed my nose through when possible so she could obviously see how desperately I wanted out, and all this time, she spoke to me in that weird, high-pitched voice she assumes when talking to me. I don’t mind it, though; it’s one of my Female’s quirks, one of the ways she adores me. But then my Female placed me inside a larger, weird shaped box—one of those boxes that my brothers told me about. One of those boxes that they enjoy hiding beneath and crawling around under when their Females and the Male of that household try to grab them to bring them inside before dark (I never received such treatment, for my Female pampered me indoors; I didn’t enjoy the times she placed me outdoors with the strange smells and sounds and prickly grass that tickled my toes).
So my female placed my box inside one of those boxes that I so often saw her climb in and out of from my observation window, got in, and then that large box roared to life and began moving. I realized it then: I had been eaten alive. Apparently humans have a pact with those larger, growling beast-boxes to be eaten by them and carried places, much like how the mothers of my kind carry us by the back of the neck in our mouths. When the beast-box or our mothers reach wherever it is we go, they spit us out, unharmed.
Though I had been in such situations before, I loathed every minute of them. I let my Female know my feelings all the way to my new home, but she only talked to me in that voice of hers and poked her long-foretoes through the holes in the wire door to touch my face. Finding some comfort in her touch, I bumped my head against her long-foretoes. She did nothing more to aid my situation, but I forgave her.
We arrived at our new sanctuary, and I refused to leave my box for a time; it smelled funny, foreign, and unfamiliar. Then my Female’s Male walked through the door sometime later, and my Female pulled me out of the crate or carrier (that’s what they call it) unceremoniously and placed me on the chair near the window. I hunkered down and waited, curled unto as small a ball as I managed atop the soft, round pouch-blanket she made me, staring at her fixedly and establishing a psychic connection with her to tell her that I WANTED TO GO HOME.
She ignored me. I know I got through to her, but she ignored me.
Over the days that followed, I hid beneath the bed. I hid beneath the other bed in the second room. I hid beneath the couch and chairs when I dared go into the room with the door to the outside. I are when I felt hungry and when I felt empty, and she fed me treats when she came home. I missed my brothers, especially the Brown one who played with me sometimes.
Everyday my Female left in the morning, promised to return home, and did later that afternoon almost every day. While she was gone, I slept and ate my feelings. She warned me against that, but what else was there to do? I was bored, sad, and lonely, and I never felt like playing.
About a week or so later, she brought home a squirming, tiny creature of boundless energy in that crate she transported me in.
“Meet your new brother,” she said and opened the wire door.
Brother? I recall asking, as I inched forward, wary of what the crate contained. I sprang back with a sudden jolt when I saw what she unleashed from the crate. He bounded out, leaping, fearless; he stopped short when he saw me.
I remember I stopped short, crouching, every muscle taut like one of those tightly-wound, coiled springs my brothers and I played with. I had never seen one of us so tiny before. It was unnatural and unnerving.
This is absolutely definitely NOT my brother, I said, and scuttled away.
Trip (for I later learned that was his name—and what a ridiculous name at that) lives up to his name, and I heard (and still hear) my Female and Male cry in alarm when he attacks their feet and literally trips them up. All of this I watched with slight amusement and slight alarm from beneath the bed down the hall. At least when he terrorized them, he left me alone in peace.
Worst of all, when they weren’t around, Trip followed me. He still does. Invades my space constantly, though after that third or fourth day when I ventured out and attacked him through the crinkly fish tube, swatted him a good many times, and sat on his face once or twice when he tried to best me in wrestling, I have learned not to mind his antics as much. It’s nice to have a brother again, even if this one whines when I sit on him when he knows perfectly well that he is puny and I am not and, more times than not, he bites me first, giving me the lady’s right to finish it. The lungs on that one. How he yowls. For hours straight every night, shut away in the hall room as he is to relieve me of Trip-sitting duty and letting me, my Female, and her Male sleep, and also to prevent him from destroying anything at night.
But I digress.
As I said at the beginning, my favorite part of the day is when my Female returns home from work or school or wherever it is she goes off to during the day hours. The ridiculous and dull mutt upstairs barks (he’s too dumb to recognize the people living here—idiot), and the key turns in the lock. I sprint down the hall, Trip on my back heels. For so puny a person, he’s fast.
My Female bares her teeth in a way I’ve learned to recognize as joy as she calls our names and places the soft-box-with-straps she wears on her back on the couch, and Trip dances around her feet, batting the strings on the weird things covering her toes. I never understood why she wears them to go outdoors; she never offered me any those times she tossed me in the yard and the stiff, itchy grass prickled my toes.
But it’s for the best because I hate anything touching my toes except the hard floor that my claws sometimes skid across (honestly why Males and Females like that kind of floor is beyond me because it is entirely useless for chasing and running quickly over unlike carpet) and carpet. I love carpet. Though my Female yells at me for loving the carpet and kneading my claws in it. But it’s so soft and plushy and is perfect for running and bounding and feels so nice on my toes, similarly to how my fuzzy bed and pillows and some of the blankets my Female and her Male have lying around on the couches and bed that I love sinking and kneading all my toes into feel.
Anyway, she sets that soft-box-with-straps down on the couch and I glance at it; sadly, it’s full of those box-not-boxes made of that crinkly paper that I love to lay on but that my Female shoos me off of. If the soft-box-with-straps were empty, I might crawl inside if I wasn’t under constant fear of Trip careening off the couch or sharpening-ramp onto my back or worse—my head—while I am defenseless and unable to hug him close, bite his face, and sit on his head until he screams; after that, I let him up and prepare for him to stand on his wobbly back legs to bite my neck. It’s not like he’s predictable or anything. No, not at all.
I miss the days when I was the ruthless terror preying on the Black one who cussed me out, the Brown one who was nice until he screamed at me to stop, and the poor Orange who may, as my Female says, lack some brains. Those days were fun. Now I’m constantly watching my back because my Female asks me when she returns:
“Did you keep Trip out of trouble?”
Always, I stare at her unblinking, trying to silently communicate.
No.
Of course not.
Why would you think that?
She’s seen my brother in action (he’s also adopted I add again in case you forgot as I’ve witnessed my Female and her Male do quite often; they especially forget the jingling things they keep in their pockets or sacks that look like ever so much fun to bat around but that they scold us for touching). She knows the trouble Trip somehow manages to achieve in the 0.5 seconds it takes to turn around, yet she asks me if I keep him out of trouble every day. She might as well ask me to push a boulder up a hill or sweep the floors or shut Trip up when he doesn’t get his way.
Impossible tasks.
Today, for example, Trip managed to climb up the chairs in the food room and then sprint across the hard-and-slidey floor, leap onto the couches, and hurtle off my favorite chair onto my back in less time than it takes me to consume the leftover tuna fish my Female gives me from the can (which, I might add, is quick. Growing up with three older brothers, if nothing else, taught me the fastest way to inhale tuna or some such delicacy without diminishing the savory flavor). For that, I sat on his face until he screamed and then chased him around for a time until I bored of that game and he trotted off to create some other mischief while I bathed and took a nap. Completely responsible things to occupy my time with I assure you, and I’m certain my Female understands.
The fact that Trip was, during this time, completely unsupervised is entirely beyond my control. Entirely.
Today my Female returned, asked the usual questions, and has now settled down on the couch with the portable glowing screen that sits on MY designated lapspace, so I hop onto the couch and sit patiently by her side, watching her bald and declawed long-foretoes dart across the clickey-pad. They look like fun to bat at, but I resist the urge. I’m not Trip, after all. I maintain some dignity about me at all times, unlike my uncouth hooligan of a bother. Brother. Same thing, I suppose.
She turns to me, and I offer my chin to her to scratch, but she pets my head instead. Didn’t she see my chin that I obviously wanted her to scratch? I nudge my chin against her hand as she clearly didn’t get it beforehand.
Then I curl up by her lap and move ever so subtly so that, before she realizes it, I am laying across her arm and rendering her incapable of reaching the clickey-pads below the glowing screen.
That should teach her to put something on my personal lapspace, and besides, I know she needs the distraction from time to time. To emphasize this, I purr, knowing she will feel guilty about moving while I am doing so, but really, it’s for her benefit. She needs the attention sometimes as much as I do.
I don’t hold grudges, by the way, but I do appreciate when someone notices my demands and if not, I tell them in the best way I know how. She bares her teeth at me again, and I gaze up at her and blink lazily. She responds by also blinking. I blink back. It’s a code we both learned that neither of us fully understand yet, but I enjoy communicating with my Female this way. With her other hand, she waggles her long-foretoes at me and they make a swishing noise that is irresistible to my highly active and curious mind, so naturally, I bump my nose against the tips of her long-foretoes, purring, and am delighted when she begins to scratch my chin again with her remaining free hand.
Have you ever noticed just how strange Males and Females’ hands are? They’re thin and oddly shaped, not like mine, which are perfect and round and delicate and lovely and good at catching stuffed mice mid-air when my Female tosses them to me. I’m “quite clever with my paws,” she says. Of course I am. Why wouldn’t I be?
After a while, I yield my Female’s arm to her, and her long-foretoes resume their darting across the clickey-pads, but she stops occasionally to pet my head and scratch the spot between my ears, which I like.
Did I ever tell you about the times I’ve tried to help my Female and one of the other Females that used to feed me delicious food by testing their clickey-pads? One morning, I noticed the other Female’s glowing screen with the clickey-pad sitting on the table that I am forbidden to walk over but do anyway because it’s there and I can walk on it and hopped onto the nearest chair and poked my nose and eyes over the side of the table, sniffing for the vanilla smell of that other Female that meant she was nearby. On the glowing screen was a beautiful scene of colorful grass that didn’t prickle my toes and flowers that looked absolutely scrumptious, but that I couldn’t eat. I waited a minute or two, my curiosity building about the clickey-pad, and then I couldn’t wait any longer.
I stood on my back legs and placed my foretoes on the clickey-pad, and suddenly, odd black squiggles appeared in the blank space in the middle of the flowers. I wondered if my touching the clickey-pad and the squiggles were related, so I moved to another section of the clickey-pad and tried again, and more squiggles appeared. Not only am I clever at catching things with my paws like any other normal person, but I taught myself to decode the secrets of the clickey-pad and the glowing screen.
Then the other Female entered the room and I quickly put my foretoes back on the chair, sat, and stared at her, willing her to understand clearly that I absolutely was not just touching the clickey-pad. But instead of scolding me and shooing me out of her seat (which wasn’t even that comfortable), she pulled out another glowing screen, only this one fit somewhere in her legs-but-not-legs and lacked a clickey-pad. How primitive. And boring. She held up the glowing screen for a moment, making that odd choking sound Males and Females do when they are amused or find something funny. I didn’t get it.
But I understand that humans often pull out their tiny primitive glowing screens when they find something funny or cute and want to remember it forever or show their friends later. She said she was sending me to my Female. I thought I understood that, too, but she never sent me anywhere...but I knew that somewhere, my Female was seeing me me, and I hoped it made her happy.
          I decide not to help my Female master the clickey-pad today, though, and lay my head down to take a nap. Then the jingling begins, gradually growing louder, and sure enough, he flops onto the couch beside me and immediately attacks my neck. Silently, I look up, wide-eyed, at my Female. She quickly relieves me of my squirming burden and tosses him onto the other chair, sending him flying momentarily through the air before he plunks down on the soft cushions, unharmed. It is amusing to see him fly, to say the least. He lands, invigorated rather than taking her rebuke to heart, and licks his tail hurriedly in the childish way he and one of my older brothers, the Black one, share before he begins rolling around on the chair, having discovered one of our toys behind the pillow.
          I stay with my Female while she works, my back against her leg, and my silky black and beautiful tail swishing gracefully through the air. Tails are so elegant, and they convey so much, too. But my Female and her Male and her friends all lack tails. What a shame. They could use them for so many things, like telling someone you are insulted without saying anything, or showing excitement by shooting your tail straight up in the air. Silent conversation is an element it seems my Female and her friends have not yet mastered at my superior level. I imagine they would look ridiculous with tails even if tails benefit their communication abilities. Mine will still be silkier and more elegant than theirs if they grew them.
My Female and I often play a talking game down the hall and have since the early days of my childhood. I sit on one end of the hall staring at her; meanwhile, she ducks behind the wall on the opposite side or behind a door, leaving it slightly ajar, and after a second or two, I see the top of her head poke out from behind the door. Her eyes glint, and she bares her teeth in her way or calls my name or says what I think in her language equals a greeting; whichever she chooses, it signals the beginning of the game, and I reply, speaking the first word I think of. As she ducks behind the door or wall, I creep closer, keeping close to the wall and freezing whenever she reemerges; I speak whenever she does, and this seems to make her happy. It’s our game, and at the end, I get close enough to tap her and play, which makes me happy. Usually I reach through the tiny space between the door and the wall and bat at my Female’s shins, protected as I am by the door for she is too large to squeeze through the space as I am. Sometimes, though, I signal I don’t want to play by not batting at her, so she bends down and pets me instead.
          Squeezing. That brings me to another recent development I am NOT thrilled with at all and that is most certainly not my fault, and I take no responsibility with the state of things, only I try to communicate my displeasure at this thing which has happened as often as possible.
          My Female calls me beautiful, but her Male meanly calls me fat (but I think it stems from his jealousy in that he is not covered in silky, black-and-white fur and lacks the daintiness and elegance my Female praises me for), but I admit that I noticed more fur and more…space…around my middle when bathing this morning, but I do not see this as a negative trait at all, for it gives my Female more to pet after I flip over onto my back to permit her to rub my belly (a thing that I adore).
Alas, to my utter dismay, it seems to my Female that when I ate my feelings and lay around the house after she moved me because I was lonely and the experience was thoroughly traumatic, and then she LEFT ME during the days to my whims, and I felt like doing few enjoyable things and only wanted to hide, unmoving, all day until she returned—that I apparently had many feelings to eat. When Trip arrived, I discovered that his food is so much better than my own, probably because they give all the best food to the babies and neglect the preteens in favor of the mewling, tiny ones. So, my Female placed me on a diet, which I learned today means that all food disappears (Trip’s included) during the day and only appears at night, and I am no longer allowed to partake of Trip’s food anymore (which I DO NOT approve of in the least), but at least my Female still gives me treats and tuna when she sometimes eats it.
I forgive my Female, though. I know she means well, even if I do not see it exactly that way. She lets me sit in her lap and help her with the clickey-pads and make squiggles on the glowing screen, and she spends plenty of time with me alone and together, we listen to Trip sit outside the bedroom door and cry. We—my Female and I—think he may have a thing she calls Separation Anxiety, and by shutting him out temporarily, she shows him that although he cannot see her for a while, she will always return. She plays with me often, too, and lets me sleep in her soft and squishy bed (a luxury Trip does not enjoy, to my delight). As far as the bed goes, I am still her favorite.
I do not smell that other female of my kind as much as in that first home with my Female; her traces are fainter and linger only on the oldest toys my Female brought with her, masked now my mine and Trip’s scents. Part of me wonders, when I smell that other, lost female from time to time, what became of her and if her absence is the reason my Female sometimes looks at me with what I believe she calls sadness on her furless face and why she frantically searches the house when I forget to answer her or hide for a time. I wonder if that is why my Female holds me so tightly at times, as though she worries one day I might disappear, too, and fade with the disappearing scent of that other female of my kind. In every touch, every pet, every silly thing she says and does, every game we play, every hug she gives or kiss she plants on my nose or forehead, and every humming laugh she emits when I do something she calls cute to get her attention, adopting a rascal of a little brother so I wouldn’t be lonely, (even placing me on the loathsome diet that she believes serves my best interest)—in all of that, I know my Female loves me.
Because that look of joy in her funny-shaped eyes and furless face when my Female returns and hunts through the house to find, pet, and talk with me—it makes me happy.  









Jemma the black-and-white tuxedo cat lives in Texas with her Female, Abbie, Abbie’s Male (husband), Ben, and her pesky-but-cute little brother, Trip. When she isn’t narrating elements of her adventures and relaying them to Abbie to write, helping Abbie master the clickey-pads, and babysitting Trip, Jemma enjoys sleeping in her favorite chair, under the beds, or in the middle of the floor two feet from her plush cat bed, eating, and people-watching from her favorite window until a loud truck rumbles by. Most of all, she enjoys living her life of luxury, playing with Trip keeping Abbie company, and receiving many pets and much attention.

Saturday, June 30, 2018

A Collection of Campus Poems

I dropped the ball two weeks ago (and last week when I could have made up for it); two weekends ago my husband and I returned from a mission trip, and upon arriving home, I worked on a couple pressing homework assignments and then promptly fell asleep for over two hours, waking up well past four in the afternoon. Sometimes you just need sleep, apparently.

This week, time finally opened up to begin writing for fun instead of homework. It had been nearly a month since I sat down to write something enjoyable, and when I sat down, as you can imagine, all the ideas that filled my head full to bursting during that busy time...fled. Coaxing them out from wherever they ran to has been difficult, but I caught hold of the tail, so tugging the rest of the beast out from beneath the bed shouldn't be terribly difficult. And no, I'm not talking about either of my cats (my husband and I adopted a new baby kitten yesterday; I'll include a photo of him at the end of this post); one should never drag a cat by its tail. That's just cruel. 

Cat tangent aside, I spent a couple evenings this week working on the sixth installment of Boy With a Bear Tattoo, and while I may be able to sit down this afternoon and write furiously until that part of it is done, it would be poor and unpolished writing, and I for one believe you all deserve better than a hastily written and pieced-together chapter.

My solution? I'll post three poems of various lengths that I wrote while on campus last semester all pertaining to something outdoor. I hope you enjoy them! 

Also, speaking of poems, my dear friend, Meg McKeel, recently published a book of poetry on Amazon! I bought it, and her poetry is incredibly beautiful. 
Click here to view Little Daydreams: a book of poems 



The Weathered Piano

Still, the keys rest now, the
Brush of wind and sun
the only touches they receive.
Long past, the fingers stopped
Caressing their pale and dark faces.
Their eighty-eight tongues
Long ago ceased their singing,
For touch and love alone gave
Them purpose, but
Long ago, the purpose passed.
Every day, the touches they
Crave turn aside and pass them by.
So their voices, lacking
Reason to sing, fall mute.
The body battered, worn,
Wasted and want for warmth,
Lingers all alone and cold,
Unburied in a living grave
Above the surface.

Perhaps the cruelest fate
Is not to die, but to
Live among but outside life:
To crave touch,
But never receive it;
To long for song,
But lack voice;
Doomed to watch all you
Love live on.






Ripples on a Pond

Oft I’ve wanted to write
a poem about the
ripples of raindrops
on a still pond.
A poem
full of alliteration
to create the sensation
of music, the steady
plop plop plop
of the droplets
falling from trees overhead.
But like the rain,
my words are spent
as soon as they touch
the page, absorbed
by paper.
Yet though my fleeting words
are like the rain,
and over time disappear,
their ripples shake the surface
long after the words
sink below.




Gods of Thunder and Lightning

Clouds turn dark the sun,
making morning night,
and children, fearing,
dart inside
while the thunder,
rolling o’er heavens,
tolls the time for war.

In darkened daylight,
thunder sounds a gentle grumble,
gruffly warning,
sternly bidding
all to take to shelter
so the battle might begin.

Then the mild thunder
shifts its tone,
bellowing a war cry
as day falls into dusk.

At night, it roars,
its roaring voice
cracking, challenging,
chasing Zeus’ bolt.

Children shriek in bed
as battle wages,
the flashing of the blazing sword
and the groaning peal
as it strikes thunder’s shield
shakes foundations
and rattles windows
of the mortal beings below.

The clouds,
those gloomy heralds
watch the grisly battle wane,
and when the lightning
fades to distant,
seldom strikes,
the thunder cries,
the victor,
booms its hard-fought glory.

Then as the grieving clouds
slowly staunch their
torrential tears,
the weary warrior
retires, and there
gently sings its song
of fearsome conquest.

Thunder rumbles,
and I wonder
why, at times, it’s fierce,
and why, at times, it’s mild.




--------------------

Thank you for reading! As promised, here's a photo of baby Trip, who is currently crawling around my lap, pressing random computer keys, and chewing on my sweatshirt. He's a literal handful, and fiercely persistent for a creature that weighs under 2 pounds, but I love him.


To see more photos of my cats, Jemma and Trip, as well as get behind-the-scenes peeks into my writing journey and stay updated about what books and stories I am currently reading, follow me on Instagram at Writings by Abigael. Thank you, and I'll see you in a few weeks with the sixth part of my novella, Boy With a Bear Tattoo!

~Abigail

Saturday, May 5, 2018

Ballad of a Madman

Finals are next week and between studying, writing final papers, and completing term projects, I had little time to write the fourth installment of my novella Seven Months. Because of that, I am taking a brief hiatus from it and will instead post one of my final projects for my World Literature class! If it sounds boring, I promise you--it isn't an essay, in fact, it is a creative' project I rather enjoyed drafting and writing!
First, though, I'll give you some background. In World Literature, we were discussing how literature affects people in different countries and even continents, and how literature influences and sparks ideas between authors, essentially the definition of intertextuality and literary influence. As examples, we read Memoirs of a Madman by Nikolai Gogol (Russia), which then influenced A Madman's Diary by Lu Xun (China), and then finally The Diary of a Madman by Guy de Maupassant. I provided the links in the titles if you are interested in reading each! My version may make more sense after you read the originals, but it is not necessary. Anyway, each work is a satirical reaction to political governments and movements, from the realization that Mother Russia failed her children to the older generations leeching off the younger to the corruption of power. They are, I believe, fascinating reads.
Our assignment was to create our own adaptations of these pieces, and I opted to write mine in ballad form, which then deteriorates into free verse as the madness assumes control and takes over the narrator. You'll have to tell me whether I succeeded in that goal or not!


Ballad of a Madman

I.

Today I chose to walk to work;
Most days I ride the bus.
The sun shone high, the weather fine—
I could not make a fuss.

It is mid-March, and spring has come.
The creatures calling know
And herald change, the winter gone.
They do not miss the snow.

These thoughts I mused the morning through;
There’s change upon the wind.
I sat and mulled through what this means
Until the daylight thinned.

Returning home, I took the bus.
The sky was dark and black.
My boss demanded that I stay
And pick up where pace slacked.

So, I stayed at my desk until
I filed the tallest pile
Of paper left by older men
Who thought it not worthwhile.

“Fire them!” I say, but no one cares
To heed the words of youths.
While money stuffs their pockets full,
They ignore a young man’s truths.

              ((Are they deaf?))


II.

The sky released a sheet of rain
Upon the ground this morn.
There was no hint of yesterday
Or any creatures born.

I left the bus and went to work,
All drenched and soaked from rain.
You see, I have no coat or fur
To shield me. (What a pain.)

The only coat I own is worn
And tattered from long use,
For all my money went to pay
My debts for school—the noose!

It tightens fingers ‘round my neck.
Long labor is its bane,
Or else I’ll drown in notes from banks,
My life gone down the drain.

I should have saved, I see that now
But what else could I do?
Advisors urged me to attend,
And thus, my troubles grew.

School bled my wallet dry as bone;
I took out many debts
To pay for college, but my job
Pays not enough, I fret.

My boss stared hard when I walked in,
Displeased by my attire.
My suit and tie were hanging limp.
He said I need a dryer.

I hate my job, but it pays well,
Or decent, I suppose.
But older workers always judge,
And they stare down their nose.

Why should they waste their extra thoughts?
And prod into my life?
My boss, he condescends my state.
He’s on his second wife.

Why two? I wonder in my seat
And gaze across the room.
The window’s closed, the clock chimes ten.
Outside and in, there’s gloom.

              ((He has too much in life
and I too little
for him to demand more from me.))


III.

I noticed something strange outside
In trees beside my home.
Birds flapped their wings, their fury red,
‘round nests, turned-over domes.

I marveled at their rage and fear,
Their voices I heard shriek.
Until I turned and saw bold squirrels
Steal birdseed from the meek.

This angered me; I ran downstairs
And out the door I dashed,
To scare those daring squirrels away;
But black their eyes did flash.

They fixed their beady gaze on me
And flicked their bushy tails,
Stretched cheeks stuffed full of food for birds,
Bared teeth as sharp as nails.

They frightened me, I cannot lie.
I understood the birds!
Who fluttered, squawking, in the boughs
And spoke to me in words.

At first I thought I had gone mad!
For birds don’t speak our tongue.
But sure enough, in harried speech
They yelled, their warnings rung.

Beware, beware! they called and cried,
They take our seeds, our seeds!
They spring and steal away our stores
Despite our desperate pleas.

Squirrels dig and bury all their food,
And have enough to spare,
But they insist on taking ours—
Oh help! They steal our shares!

We spend all winter working hard
While they grow big and fat.
Our labor they do seize as theirs,
And leave us for the cat.

Then to the earth one tumbled thus,
And shook away the dust
He eyed me, sharp, and hopped my way,
My shoulder he did trust.

His beak cracked wide, as though to speak
Or whisper in my ear
His voice was weak and dry; he rasped
As I bent down to hear.

I will grow weak—I cannot fly
Malnourished as I’ll be.
And all because the greedy squirrels
Stole all my gain from me.

His long lament did touch my ears,
I started from my trance;
I ran at squirrels, our treacherous foes
And chased them up a branch.

Above me, how they screeched and chimed,
Stringing threats and cursing me;
Their eyes flashed red, their tails whipped air.
I shook upon my knees.

It’s true, I realized with a jolt
The squirrels all lie and thieve.
Gluttons—the entire bunch,
They’ll now come after me.

              ((I must save myself from them.))


IV.

The squirrels intend to trap me.
They followed me today.
They sit at desks and watch me work;
I cannot keep away.

They stole the seeds; they took the loot
The hard-earned work of birds.
My boss just laughed, my warning lost.
He never hears my words.

And still they lurk and leer and laugh
The lazy spawn of swine.
They jest and jeer and do no work,
But watch as I do mine.

((Swine. Now there’s a thought—squirrels and swine.
Orwell wrote something like that once, didn’t he?))

…..

It’s evening
Once more I’m working late
While they go to the bar.
Grey hairs sprout from the squirrels.


V.

At my desk I slept last night;
The squirrels kept me from leaving.
Their black eyes took on human form
They peered down from the ceiling.

It’s morning, daylight now.
I should be safe in public.
I’ll take the bus…If I can find my wallet.

It seems to have disappeared.

VI.

The cursèd squirrels did steal my cash,
I’m forced to walk their streets.
That’s when they got me, chased me
Until I reached my home.

The sight that meets me there is grave.
Squirrels shift their skins and stand
As men: a banker with a note in hand;
Beside him, the man I pay my college debt.

….

They took the little left to me,
My home, my books, my trees.

No chirping sounded from the birds
When I fell to my knees.
Or when I tossed the can away,
The stench of gasoline heavy.
             
Yet they never made a sound.
              Not even when I struck the match.

VII.

The fire ate the house so fast;
Smoke blackened every wall.
Then sirens wailed from down the street.
My skin began to crawl.

The squirrels watched as their empire burned
Their black eyes glimmered red.
Safe in their boughs, among their spoils of war,
They burrowed into bed.

“Beware, beware!” I screamed to anyone who stopped.
“They take my coins, my cash!
They lie in wait and lie and thieve
My money and my life.

“Their money grows in mounds of bills—
They have enough to spare!
But they insist on taking ours—
Oh help! They take my share!

“I spend all day long working hard
While they lie and relax.
My work, my wages they claim as theirs,
And leave the rest for tax.

“I’m growing weak—I cannot see
The world seems grim and bleak.
And it’s because the greedy squirrels
Stole all my gain from me.”

Men seized my arms at my last cry
As people watched and gaped.
The fools. The fools. They’re blind, they’re blind—
Caught in the same trap as I.

I cannot run. Cannot flee.
My money’s drowning me.
But it’s all gone. Ha!
Taken by squirrels and burned by me.

I beat them this time.
But the birds are helpless.
              helpless
                             helpless
                                           helped less.

Beaten, they suffer. Robbed, they cry.

The birds will die, the birds will die
              die
                             die
                                           die
Starved.
Drained of all their work and wealth.
While the squirrels grow ever fat.

Save them!
Save the birds!
Don’t let them—

Don’t let them die.




---------------

That concludes my adaptation, Ballad of a Madman! If you enjoyed this and want to comment your thoughts and opinions or conclusions, or even to say hi, please leave a comment and I'll check it and get back to you as soon as possible! Also, to see daily writing and reading updates, follow me on Instagram (link here or on the right sidebar under Social Media Accounts). You can also follow me on Google+ to receive updates about when I post new material here, such as Seven Months: Part 4, which will come your way in two weeks!

Have a lovely Saturday and thank you for reading and following my blog!

~Abigail