The Pacifist
With wind speeds
clocking over fifty miles per hour,
nature was
telling me to stay away
unless I wanted
a fight.
I took her
advice and stayed inside,
occasionally
looking out the window
as the tree took
a beating,
branches
scattered over the yard,
while listening
to its howls of delight.
Yes, I will wait
for my turn, tomorrow,
when its anger
had subsided.
Today, I am a
pacifist,
waving a white
flag in surrender.
Yet Another Choice In Life
All I wanted to
do was go to the store to find
an insecticide
to kill some ants that had been
congregating by
the front door of the house.
Little did I
know I would have so many choices,
lemon scent, orange scent, lavender scent,
and not to be
undone, an outdoor fresh scent,
and even with so
many choices, I was not tempted
to smell each
one as some might do when checking
out which
perfume or cologne to purchase,
because somehow,
I didn’t quite think it would
be beneficial
for my health to smell the fumes for
something that
was meant to kill ants and roaches,
and I very much
doubted if the ants would care
which scent I
used, so from the four fragrances,
I chose the
outdoor fresh scent which
seemed something
to best to blend in
with the scent
already outdoors.
As for the ants,
I would tell them goodbye,
so long, as I
sprayed the territory they had invaded,
and maybe say a
little prayer
as I bury them
in a mass grave in the backyard.
Graffiti
The graffiti
artist wrote ‘Wash Me’
on the rear
window of a car
completely
covered by dust,
using only their
finger instead of the usual tools
of the trade,
that of a handy can of spray paint,
and I wondered
if the car owner called
the police to
file a report about the graffiti,
and if the
police took any finger prints
from the car to help
them identify the felon
if it was truly
being considered as a crime,
or instead, just
laughing it off, as they wrote
him up for
reporting a bogus crime
advising him
what he probably should
have done in the
first place, by just
washing his car
to remove those words?
In the end, the
car remained unwashed,
leaving the
words in place, after all,
it seemed to be
who he was,
one to do
nothing.
Forty-One Steps
They moved into
an apartment,
and were given
three options to choose from,
something on the
first floor
with no steps to
maneuver,
or the second
floor with only
twenty-one steps
to walk up,
but there was
also a third option,
the one that
they chose,
the third floor
with forty-one steps.
It had the
maximum number of steps
for the
apartment complex, definitely not
suited for
someone looking for senior living,
but then they
were young,
and that wasn’t
the purpose of the complex.
I asked where
was the elevator,
where was the
escalator,
or can’t you
just beam me up,
but those
technologies were not in place,
so I made the
trip, many, many times,
up and down,
down and up,
the result, the
same each time,
sore legs for an
old man as I helped out,
but I was one of
the lucky ones,
not having to
make as many trips
carrying
furniture and boxes
as the ones
moving into the apartment did.
Now that all the
furniture and boxes are all moved in,
and the boxes
are slowly getting unpacked,
there is time to
relax in the evening on their balcony
as they enjoy
the view of the city,
and watching the
deer come out to graze,
one of the two
benefits of living on the third floor,
the view, and
the exercise from their new stair climber.
DUANE ANDERSON
DUANE ANDERSON currently lives in
La Vista, NE. He has had poems published
in Fine Lines, Cholla Needles, Tipton Poetry Journal, and several other
publications. He is the author of ‘On the Corner of Walk and Don’t Walk,’ ‘The
Blood Drives: One Pint Down,’ and ‘Conquer the Mountains.’
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