Monday, May 27, 2013

Beach Trip to Connie's Cottage



      Seven of The Portland Nine have just returned from a retreat at Connie's beach house in Longbeach, WA. We missed Kathy, Wendy, and Heather, but want them to know we actually did do some writing along with the more important aspects of these visits to Connie's: eating, drinking, laughing, crying, and telling our stories! And yes, there was some beach time, but the weather was not conducive to much of that.
     I hope the writers will post some of the great writing and poetry that was done over the weekend. Here are a few shots to give you the flavor of it all.
      Ruth

Ephemeral moment: the clouds slipped to the edges and the rain stopped.

"Is this how we do it?"

"I've never been around women like you!"

100% involvement on all projects

"I want to spend my life doing this!"

Hear the buzz?
Without going slow
Conversations flow
Commitment challenges
Emerging
Making decisions critical
The essential ripple:
Change…
Goes all the way.........
(Found poem by Ruth)
Finding Words

Monday, May 13, 2013

Angie





Even in her sixties and carrying some extra pounds, Angie was as cute as the proverbial bug's ear. A tiny woman in her youth, she had been a knockout. Later, she was still very appealing with a ready smile and a quick laugh. Everyone loved her.

Unfortunately, poor Angie was as gullible as she was sweet. Her life had been a series of run-ins with cruel Lotharios who saw her small figure and easy going disposition as an invitation to domination. They pushed her around with words, fists and. sometimes. religion.

Her first husband was an absurdly handsome man, whose beauty, as it often is, was in inverse proportion to his madness. He beat her, humiliated her and was unfaithful to her, but he always returned on his knees, in tears and begging for forgiveness. She was a sucker, but twenty years of that nonsense finally wore her out, so she took off for Florida, leaving him alone in Tennessee. He jumped in his car when he found out and swore he'd drive until he found her and killed her. Luckily, the car broke down and he ran out of murderous energy before he reached the state line.

Her second husband had a birthday within a few days of her first. But, he was so full of wonderful promises in his letters that it didn't seem possible that he could turn out anything like Damon. A clue to her should have been that he sent those letters from prison, but she just didn't see it coming although there were some pretty big road signs along the way.

She ended up in a Texas trailer with him. He didn't hit her, and he didn't play around, but she had to support him and he barely let her out of his sight. She tired of his demands but her rose colored glasses stayed as thick as before, so she never left him.

Sunday, May 12, 2013


“Ocean Spray”
Inspired by a Miller Paint Sample


The winter blanket of gray
Lifts and morphs
 into feather pillows
on an azure firmament
Volatile winds 
scoop up ocean splinters
and hurl them to the wind
as western sun shards
 backlight
  pelican parades
heading home
to roost.

 May 10, 2013

Being Alone
3 min.

When the T.V. is silent
and Pandora and the radio
are turned off
and I am alone,
I love the wave of peacefulness
that envelopes me.
It slows my heart rate
and I relax
into the comfort
of knowing
 there will be no surprises
until I choose to open the door.

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Joyful Tears


Anna Maria stood outside her trailer exuding an air of frustration and irritation. Her director had just asked her to display "joyful tears" when her boyfriend returned from the war in Iraq. She was not an actress who found it easy to cry at a moment's notice, and to add that she had to weep for happiness just completely flummoxed her. Who the hell, she thought, really cries for joy? Anyway, Anna Maria was a soap opera veteran so she knew she could do it, and nobody would be too much the wiser if the emotions weren't real. She went in the trailer and cut up the usual onions and stuck a few in her pocket. When Joe called "Action!" she was ready. She embraced the dumb SOB that played her boyfriend/ returning war hero, smiled, pressed her onion juice coated fingers against her eyes as though trying to stop the flow of tears, and lo and behold, a profusion of clear salty liquid wet her lovely cheeks.

Friday, May 3, 2013

The Dance



The dress was iridescent green and blue satin. It moved slowly and sensuously almost by itself as she watched herself in the mirror. The pain of a new high school and no real friends was eased as she imagined the success she would be at the party. Milwaukee seemed so dull and lonely after New York, but her grandmother was socially prominent and able to foot the bill at the exclusive girl's school where she felt out of place, but still happy to be among the elect.

Her great aunt Missy had bought the dress. To her grandmother and her sister nothing was more important than family and social success, and Jane felt the subtle, but omnipresent pressure to join the elite and be popular. Her previous life in New York had been more humble and middle class. Her father's salary as a teacher, while maintaining his social status as a professional, did not touch the expenses of a girl in high society. There was no question of being a future debutante like some of her classmates, but at least she could attend cotillion looking as good as any rich businessman's daughter.

Foundation, eye shadow, eye liner, mascara and lipstick, she felt ever more excited as she applied each magic elixir to her girlish face. Then, slipping into the matching shoes, she was ready. Of course, she couldn't really think that she was beautiful, but she hoped that someone might believe the illusion she was creating. She had a blind date, who no doubt felt equally awkward at the thought of going to a dance where he knew no one, but who would be glad to have her by his side, no matter how she looked.

When they entered the dance, the band was playing loudly and they immediately jumped in with the others to dance as passionately and wildly as they could in their formal attire. Allen was tall, thin and not very impressive. Neither he nor she had much to say, but they could dance and not worry about conversation, a near impossibility anyway, the music was so loud.

Halfway through, one of her new acquaintances from school approached her with the news that Sam, from a neighboring boy's private school, had been watching her and had said that he liked her moves. He wanted to know if they could switch dates and leave the party. She hesitated for one shimmering, gossamer moment, but then, sucked into the glory of having an admirer from afar, she acquiesced and they made the arrangements.

Later, and for many years after, the moral ugliness of that agreement filled her brain in a way that having a date with a cool boy never could have. Sam had turned out to be even less exciting than Allen, and she only saw him once more. However, everyday she had to study with her classmate who had been so casually dumped. Francine belonged to an even more unattainable and admired group, the intellectual crowd. There were three of them and they were always at the top of the class. Jane's shame prevented her from ever making any overtures of friendship.

Now, far from Milwaukee, in California, each year the summons come to the annual reunions. Francine is often in the pictures, still in glasses, but looking confident and successful. She has aged gracefully and seems quite unconcerned about a small humiliation that occurred fifty years before.