These three poems by Cordelia Hanemann explore the complexities of the dark and the light that lurk in many of our most ordinary experiences…
by: Cordelia Hanemann
family reunion : saving face
squirrels scattering crumpled leaves
who would believe
I'd have to run away
to love my people
the chaos of too many voices
whims, urgencies, interruptions
stinging words : no saving my story
nor face : just me
back turned
marching through the house
doors closing behind
the air outside is sweet
blowing through my hair
across my face
the purr of my Prius shuttles me out and away
to my park, its path, the dark lake-waters
walking walking walking
cormorants crowding / turtles sunning on logs
Text from grandchild: Mimi, why did u leave?
who would believe I had anything
worthwhile to say : old lady
when everything else is interesting
no one listens to you
I needed a little space in the chaos/
I'm walking/ almost done/ be back soon.
hurt feelings moving through limbs, lungs, mouth
flying out of me like ashes on a windy day :
silence a place to keep your thoughts
my body: legs/ heartbeat/ breath
nearby heron standing patient/ regal/ calm
in the still waters of a quiet afternoon
Teen Dysphoria
Once I grew my hair too long.
Mistaken for a girl, so
I cut it in a butch
to be sure I was a boy.
Only.
I missed that girl I was not,
and the boy in my pants
and in my throat
and growing through the roof
seems like someone else.
lost son returns to the father's farm
I don't know
what I thought I'd find
nothing
but wind in the grass
the stars themselves
like old lovers
gone the way
of wasted days
their little lights
barely recalled
like the passing there
of flashing blades
shearing stalks of dry corn
weeds creeping over
abandoned furrows
rows now stumbling blocks
for me the traveler
lost without a road
still in the air
smell of straining motor
exhaust and smoke
smell of soil new turned
smell of grass
crushed underfoot
the night wind blows
the rumble of an antique tractor
too much work left to be done
burnt rubber
distant wood smoke
corn stalks
brittle and dry
rattling in the autumn chill
I am alone here
the sky black
with burnt out stars
Cordelia Hanemann is currently a practicing writer and artist in Raleigh, NC. A retired professor of English at Campbell University, she has published in numerous journals including Atlanta Review, Connecticut River Review, Southwestern Review, and California Review; anthologies, The Poet Magazine’s new anthology, Friends and Friendship and forthcoming, Adversity, Heron Clan and Kakalak and in her own chapbook, Through a Glass Darkly. Her poems have won awards and been nominated for Pushcarts. Recently the featured poet for Negative Capability Press and The Alexandria Quarterly, she is now working on a first novel, about her roots in Cajun Louisiana.