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Swing On That Swing
1
Hello, my name is Green,
Green Jacobs.
I will swing on that swing today.
The yellow one swaying in the tall oak
Tree under the
Luminesince
Of the green leaves,
On the curb.
The sun shone through my
Dull yellow curtains this morning,
Creating golden waves on my pale
Walls,
Like the color of that swing swaying,
On that curb.
I wore my favorite clothes
Today, because
I would
Meet that swing
On that curb.
Green courderoy overalls, and my perfectly
Worn in t-shirt,
Perfect old sneakers,
No socks.
I opened the screen door
On that porch
With the dog,
Always the dog, Cass.
I looked out from my curtain
Of brown stringy hair
And saw the fields billowing,
Like the waves of the sea not far
From here,
Like that golden swing,
On the curb,
Under the mellow green
Light.
Hopping down those stairs
Was usual,
The creek on the left of
The second stair,
And the dandelion
Peeking through
that crack in the last stair,
shaving it right through
the middle.
I lingered on the dirt road,
Peering at the little flys on
The daises,
Looping through the telephone
Poles, for what seemed like
Miles and miles apart.
I began to hum,
Like that sound you hear in your ears
On a hot summer day,
That’s the sun,
Hot days are the days it has
The stage to itself.
I rounded a big oak,
After redundantly trying
To hug it,
A full hug.
I had given up and skipped
Towards the curb,
And halfway there,
I eyed something in the road,
Finally I found my button.
I squatted, and dusted
Off the button,
That green button.
I jogged to the swing,
Suddenly ready and eager to
Sit.
The place,
The swing on the curb,
Is suffocated with evenets,
Like the first time I ripped my jeans,
The first time I caught a
grass hopper,
and tried to use chalk on
the dry, orange-brown dirt
road.
The place where it started
And ended,
Where my best and only friend,
Died on that swing,
That happy golden swing,
Swaying under the same oak tree
That, together, we were able
To give it a
Full hug.
She wore her hair in braids,
Always chewing on something,
A new stick,
A beatle,
Her thumb,
And sometimes she even tried
Mine.
She was holding these ropes,
So tight on that swing,
Her propeller being me,
Pushing her,
Creating moments, the you
Felt like you could
Fly.
Then she crashed,
The swing fell
And with a smash her body was
Flung onto a rock, dead.
So quickly,
Gone.
How could this happen?
Now I feel like an atom,
That lost all it’s protons, and electrons,
Leaving the neutrons, all alone,
Negatively sitting in a world
Of an abandoned atom.
I held on to that swing,
Looking up at the sky,
Pumping my legs to move as
Fast as I could,
Losing myself,
In the spontaneous,
Rhythm.
I wanted a granted wish,
Someone to say,
“You can end it whenever you think it
Should.”
And I know,
You know,
Where I would have.
2
The sound of the ropes
Snapping
Pierced my brain
And it is permantly there;
A background of my thoughts.
The curb was too far away for help,
And she had roughly whispered,
“Don’t leave, don’t worry, it’s too far…
I’m happy here, with you.”
It was the longest minutes of my
Life,
And always will be.
She died there in my arms,
Life slowly fading,
With a flutter of lashes,
Or silenced breaths,
Making it all the more unbearable.
I kept my hand on
Her heart,
The wind blew
Swirls of dust around
Us,
One so big and swift
That I couldn’t see her,
And then, when it left us,
It was clear her soul went
With it,
Because the breathing stopped.
3
I walked back to my house,
The same way I had come.
Lingering through the
Heat waves of the late morning.
Finally, I reached the coolness
Of my porch.
That was my daily routine,
Wake up,
Go to the swing,
Come back to do chores,
And lay out in the middle of
The fields,
To do my daily emptying
Of all my thoughts,
Never before was I
Interrupted,
But I guess today is
Different.
A car had pulled up into the driveway,
Turning the gravel for the
First time in
Many years.
The sound was unfamiliar
To me,
At first I glanced up
Expecting pebbled to hurtle
Down
Upon me.
I looked around,
Peering towards the
Driveway.
There it was,
A car and
I will never forget what
Was brought with it.
4
It was a boy.
He had silky brown hair,
And bright gray eyes,
Soft yet alert.
He wore a white t-shirt,
And shorts,
Simple.
At dinner Dad said that he
Was going to be
Around to work about
The farm,
I had the mornings,
And he got the rest.
I shrugged to ward off
The butterflies
In my stomach.
I didn’t want things to change,
He was two years older than i
And the order of things was
Already shuffled,
Today,
Being disturbed in my field never
Ever happened.
An extra plate was
Set on the table.
The screen door rocked
With the wind, creeking:
Get me off these hinges!
Ben Ry was washing his hands
In the bathroom
And after the most awkward
Dinner and conversation of
My life,
Dad released me…
But only to show
Ben around the farm.
We stepped outside,
The mountains in a haze,
Far, far away.
We started towards the
Chicken house,
And walking with someone other
Than my dad
Felt like walking on the
Rough stones on a beach,
Waiting to be softened by
The waves.
The wind was soft
Like his eyes
And I secretly hoped
He’d stay.
I told him to never
Go out to the fields,
Because rats were always
Around.
But, really, it was
My place
To be,
No his,
Not Ben’s.
5
There was a loft
In the barn where Ben
Now sleeps.
He told me the horses and
Sheep would keep him company;
I smiled and released
A laugh from my throat
For the first time since
Ever.
The night was cool and clear
The stars high in the sky,
Looking able to touch.
I walked down to our house
Stepping over stones.
I washed my face
In the water,
In the cool, soft, silkiness.
My night gown
Was scratchy,
But I fell asleep
Within seconds.
6
The trees are full of buds,
And I glanced up at the clouds,
High in the sky.
I wish I could live up there
And drift.
I wore my green overalls today,
A perfectly worn in t-shirt,
Perfect old sneakers,
No socks.
You know here
I’m going.
7
Dark clouds crawled up
To my path and it began to pour.
Thundered roared,
And the oak tree
On that curb
Violently swayed in the wind.
I ran to it,
To that swing,
On the curb.
It was uncontrollable,
And I stuck my hand out
To stop it.
I smiled
And sat on that
Golden, wet swing.
Again, I pumped my
Legs, and it
Felt like flying.
Before I knew it,
My hair was drenched
Full of sweet rain.
And then I slipped,
My hands let go and
I fell,
To reality.
8
Hollowed light shone,
Hazy like beams
Through a forest.
A figure,
Gray and smeared
Drifted to me.
A blur,
Everything a blur.
Hands, running footsteps,
The creak on the second
Stait,
Shouting that stund my head,
And then my bed.
9
It was Ben.
That figure gray and smeared
Did not belong
On that curb.
No. Why did he come?
No.
I want to leave this
World
And find
A place with
That big oak tree,
That golden swing,
That curb,
And that girl
Who always was chewing
On something.
I want her.
Who is she?
Fierce heat pounded
Pummeled
Me down a pit
Of darkness.
A cold grasp fought back.
I groaned.
Stop it!
Stop, Stop, Stop, Stop, STOP!
I want to go
Don’t pull me back
I’ve already gone
Too far.
10
A bitter liquid
Trickled down my throat
My eyes were able
To open,
But I didn’t want to.
Leave me alone,
Life.
I don’t want you.
I’m not opening my
Eyes.
11
Light.
It created red
Dots blinking
Within my shut eyes,
Like my yellow curtains,
Yet now open.
I hadn’t moved a muscle
Since yesterday.
Dark.
Now I could relax
I unclenched my fists,
Loosened my shoulders
And unlocked my knees.
Darn it…life is coming.
Darn it…why’d you
Have to pull me all of
Those miles?
12
I smiled at that girl,
With braids.
I hooked my overall buckles
Onto hers
And we ran to
That yellow swing swaying
On that curb.
“Green?” she said simply.
“Green?”
“Green?”
“Green?”
You can say it forever
As long as it’s you.
A tornado shuffled through
My body.
It tugged and ripped
Me apart.
I squeezed my eyes tighter.
No way.
I pulled away.
I kicked and punched,
But life pinned me down.
In anger I forced my eyes
Open.
Thank God it was dark.
The sun would have
Killed me…
Pierced me like those
Ropes snapping.
I couldn’t focus on anything,
But I knew one thing.
Life happened to be Dad and Ben.
13
Life.
Let’s just put it this way:
The devil that
Pulled
Me until
I was gone from
The angels of death.
Like my self,
Trying to hug
That big oak tree
Towering over
That golden swing swaying
On that curb.
14
There’s only 1 place
I want to be
Right now.
Those fields
Billowing with
Each wind swiftly
Moving
Across.
I felt groggy,
Drunk.
But I knew that
I needed to get there.
Armadillo.
I rolled out of my
Bed protected
In my shell
Of vagueness.
No, I wasn’t a coward,
But currently,
I’m thinking death
Is easier,
Than living.
15
My hair whipped
Around my face,
It lapped playfully
Around my neck.
My night gown was
Scratchy.
I took it off
Leaving myself
In a tank top
And a short pair of shorts.
No overalls,
No swing.
No girl.
Just me.
I hated me!
I jogged over
To my old spot
In the field.
One day,
Before Ben,
I had made a clearing
And I thrust
My self
Into it,
My eyes squinting,
I waited…
For everything to
Blow into my head.
The sun began to
Sink, finishing it’s
Solo.
Nothing came,
Everything went.
16
Dad has gray hair,
I got nervous
Around
Ben.
Does that mean I
Like him?
More than like?
I’m 12 he’s 14.
I can’t think!
I can’t remember.
2 years passed.
The swing.
That golden swing,
On that curb,
Under that big
Oak tree.
Green overalls,
Perfect
Sneakers and no socks.
Where was I going?
17
I began to leak.
Tears came
Every night, but why?
I didn’t know.
I didn’t want
To be here.
Where do I belong?
Where is my swing
My girl
My overalls, shirt and sneakers
My old dad
When Ben wasn’t here.
Stupid Ben.
I hate him.
No, I like him,
Remember?
No, Green, I don’t
Remember.
18
No more Green.
I’m Black Jacobs.
I wear dark,
Heavy mascara,
Pants,
Long-sleeved shirts,
Shoes,
Socks,
No more Green Jacobs,
Good-bye.
19
The dog isn’t on
The porch,
I chopped hat daisy,
I filled that crack.
I closed myself
In
I gave up.
I hate
Dad,
Ben,
Life.
20
Nothing is wrong.
I’m okay.
21
I’m-I’m
Not okay.
Where’s Ben?
Ben!
I grabbed
Him.
He just nodded,
Took my had,
And brought me down
This road.
He and I
Peered at flowers,
The bugs,
And stared at
Each other.
The telephone poles
Seemed
Miles and
Miles apart.
22
Almost there.
I didn’t know
Where
I was,
But I was
Almost there.
Ben stopped,
Let go of my soggy hand,
And then
I saw it.
I ran and ran
To that swing,
On that curb,
Under that
Big oak tree.
I stayed there
For hours,
Forever it seemed.
Ben stood in the
Rolling fog.
I swung
And it rained.
It revived me,
Ben revived me.
Mascara fell off my
Face,
My clothes
Lost their black
Ink
And I was
Green Jacobs
Again.