Freak Magnet
A weirdo. A freak.
A stranger in the seat
next to me on the bus.
In the elevator, only us
for thirty-two floors.
The lady who stored
wadded-up Safeway
bags in every halfway
concave vessel: a shoe,
her purse, even a few
in her bra. The one
who called me hon
when I heard her sobbing
in the dressing room, Bring
me another size, would you,
hon, I’m okay, a few
hard days is all. An old
man telling me his whole
how-he-got-here bit,
making the pieces fit
grammatically but not
chronologically, he got
to this city in 1979, met
his wife in ’72, let
him think, his son is how
old, and he is now
a doctor, takes a special kind
of person not to mind
the sickness of others,
not like his brothers,
I’m agreeing now, Right,
special, picturing his sons fight
each other so they could be called
strong or good or bright or tall.
As a freak magnet, I can relate to this.
ReplyDeleteWe who listen, and look, and are kind and alive to each other, ah, yes, we are needed in the world.
ReplyDeleteLove what you've captured in this poem, Hannah. The imagery in your poetry always takes me there.
ReplyDeleteYikes, this is beautiful, and you are making me wonder how much of a freak I am! Have a lovely week Hannah...
ReplyDeleteI assume you've heard the song with the same name by the Violent Femmes?
ReplyDeleteAh, the Violent Femmes, an adolescent love of mine.
Within reason, why NOT be a freak magnet? Aren't we here to hear as many stories as we can? What are the non-magnets, the freak-repellants, doing? Playing golf?
ReplyDeleteGreat subject here, Hannah.
Hey, thanks for indulging me on FB.
I don't like the word "freak", but I do seem to befriend some unusual people.
ReplyDeleteoh, how you bring this home. bloody wonderful!
ReplyDeletexo
erin