Wednesday, April 30, 2014

writing portfolio

The following are my portfolio pieces. I debated on how to present them, but ultimately, neatness won. I have decided to show the finished pieces, all together first and in alphabetical order, and the drafts, in the same order, after. You may choose to see the roughs if you wish, or skip them altogether. I tried to make the font and spacing match the mood of my story, but it may not come through as I copied and pasted the stories.


Annoying Orange

         As I kneel on the cold marble floor of my bathroom, the stick of the needs-to-be-cleaned toilet in my face helps the nausea culminate. It has crept from my stomach, up my throat and down to my arms and the tops of my feet. My hands feel nauseous. My feet feel nauseous.
         My mouth fills with saliva, signaling the arrival of my emesis guest. I am about to spew all I have eaten for the day plus a bonus of pepsin, gastric juice and hydrochloric acid to burn my skin and eat away at my teeth. The same chemical that can eat through iron is about to come out of my body.
         My mind flashes in an instant, what could possibly be in my stomach still from the day since it is now 2:30am, always the perfect time to vomit. I think: granolabarpastawithsauceandbread – none of those are too terribleand as I wretch, it literally hits me in the back of my nose – where is that anyway? -  the orange I had as a snack before going to bed, before knowing a virus had made it’s sticky and disgusting way past my body’s awesome, but seemingly overtaxed, defenses.
         I happily chewed and sucked on said orange, thinking how yummy and juicy it was, as I pondered having a second and with toilet water splashing me in the face, am glad I didn’t.
         Chunks of orange strike my sinuses, bounce off my teeth and dump into the toilet. The feeling of chunkiness is nothing compared to the terrible acrid acid that accompanies it, trying to take pieces of my skin with it. The taste is severe. The pain is great. It feels like I’ve swallowed acid – and except for the traveling direction – I have.
When I am finally done heaving up what this round will bring, for there is more to come, I stand at the sink to wash my mouth out. The water tastes sickly sweet, like lavender and sugar. I nearly gag again from disgusting sweetness. I even risk eating a tums to try and dislodge the acid from my throat.
You have won this round, o virus, but in the end, I will vanquish you.


Boys are…

       Boys are awesome. Boys are fun. Boys make wrinkles and mud and messes and holes. Boys wrestle. Boys play with the dog. Boys put away the dishes, go to school and cut the grass. Boys leave their shoes in the middle of the floor. Boys leave toothpaste in the sink. Boys hold open doors for their moms, say please and thank you and report wrong doings. Boys get dirty. Boys never put out their laundry. Boys leave crumbs on the counter, homework on the table and handprints on my heart. Boys are kind. Boys are generous. Boys think of their brother at a party, call when their brother is sick and attack with hugs on the play ground when they meet. Boys are tough. Boys are smart. Boys beat each other up, read to each other and hug each other good night. Boys are shy. Boys are boisterous. Boys annoy their mom and their teacher, but not their Om. Boys love dogs. Boys love ice cream. Boys like carrots and broccoli and salad. Boys speak spy language. Boys don’t speak mom language. Boys say every day how much they love mom and Penny and dad each other. Boys are love.


Finger

      As I sit in the emergency room with my 8-year-old son, I think of how I came to be sitting here, surrounded in sterility and bright colors. Devin’s finger is broken. We knew that right away. But what is there to do about a broken finger? About as much as a broken toe. He had fallen off of a stool while washing his hands and landed with his finger under the fridge. I think it became broken when he tried to get up without checking his position. In any case, it wasn’t a bad break, just a crack. We splinted it with popsicle sticks and tape and went on with our day, which happened to be date-day. One-on-one time with either mom or dad. Devin chose me J It may have actually been the reason why we didn’t make it to the emergency room until 10pm.
      We enjoyed our date: Book shopping, riding the carousel, cruising through the shoe store and finally, a pumpkin scone with hot chocolate at Starbucks. A typical “date.” Afterwards, we went back home, connected with brother and dad, got some dinner and started getting ready for bed. After the shower, came the tears.
      So now, we are waiting. Devin with tears and grimaces, me with a worry-line permanently etched into the center of my forehead. I try to cheer him, to soothe him. The pain has become too great.
      We are given a smaller and even more sterile room to sit in. One with paper on the mattress and pillow, a single piece of entertainment, a very sorry toy, to keep us occupied. Give him credit…he tries to stay entertained and keep his mind off the pain, but can not. Finally a nurse comes in and takes us to xray. Yep. It’s broken. As if there was some kind of question.
      As we are waiting for the doctor to come back in, for she had visited us briefly, Devin starts to get this look of panic on his face. He suddenly starts crying a gasping and crawling into my lap. Having no ide what had changed, I try to calm him and figure out what is wrong. Choking and sputtering, he finally gets out his question: “Are they going to cut it off?”
      In the span of less than one second, I realized where the question comes from. His whole life – and really, mine too, for my folks told me the same thing – whenever he hurt himself a little, a scratch or a poke or a bit of blood, I would distract him by asking if we should cut it off. “Mom! I scratched my arm! It’s bleeding!!” “Should we cut it off?” “uh, no.” “go play then” and off he would go, hurt forgotten.
      Now I realized, he thought we would really cut off his finger! Doc came back in, gave stronger kid pain meds and a real splint. We went home and to bed. To this day, I have not asked a child if we should cut off anything that hurts.


Lover

I push the hair of my loved one,
                                    my lover,
                                    off my face.
I sit up and take a breath in the
                                    dark.
I smell him, our oneness.
I sigh and leave our brief nest,
            wishing to prolong
                        our contact.



Mud

      Hmmm. What to do with a wheelbarrow full of accidental mud. Mud created from left over dirt and a few days of rain. I think I will just dump it over by the fence near the garden. I walk 50 steps with the wheelbarrow back to the middle of the yard to wash it out and I hear the seven children in my yard squealing and giggling. I turn to see what has happened. They have found the mud. The slurry, gloppy dark brown mud. The pond of mud that I have just dumped. It took less than 30 seconds for all seven boys and girls, ages 3 to 8, to find it.
      I didn’t know children were so attracted to mud. They did not just run over to look at it, but got up to their elbows, their knees, in it. It covered their clothes and their hair. It was in their ears.
      Ok. Easy. I’ll just get out the hose and wash them all down. It’s a nice warm day. They might even like getting sprayed with the hose. Ring! Ring! Oh, the phone. Hi, Aimee. Oh. You’re just down the road? Um, ok. Get the girls ready, you’re kind of in a hurry? Well, see, there’s this mud… And you just bought a new car that you’re driving right now?...No, I’ll just strip them down if that’s ok with you…Uh huh. See you soon. Sorry…
      Well. One at a time. That will work. I’ll just do mine first so they know what’s coming. Bean! Come here please! Get undressed (I’m four. I don’t care if I’m naked or not. It will be fun to have permission to have no clothes on…), I’m going to hose the mud off your legs and arms. None got under your clothes. Spray, spray, spray… Alright, Gracie. Your turn. Let’s get off your…Oh!! Hi, Aimee!! That was so fast! Your new car must be a race car.
      I can see my friend is upset, but she is holding a brave face. She starts to get her girls out of their clothes. More squealing. From a boy. My boy. I look over. He is covered in mud. Not just up to the knees and elbows. Covered. In. Mud. Even his little butt crack is filled in. Was there so much mud over there?
      Aimee laughs. This has helped her face her dilemma of dirty-girls-new-car. How am I going to get all that mud off/out of my child?


Ocean

I’m floating in a haze of swirling sand and bubble-flecked, raging water. I realize I’m running out of oxygen, drowning and I feel peaceful, accepting of the blue heaven surrounding me.  Then as my face scrapes the bottom of the ocean, the punishing ocean, I realize, I’m drowning and if I don’t get air immediately, I will likely die in this torrent of serenity.
I can see the surface, for the sun is shining wondrously around me in shafts and beams. Not even the violent movement of a thousand gallons of water can detour their paths. I go toward the light (air) with weakening strokes and break the surface, dragging air into my lungs. I am hit again and again by the waves, I find myself face down in the sand at the bottom of the ocean, the unforgiving ocean.
            I’m tossed through the water like a dog tosses a squirrel before ripping it to shreds. Pieces of shells, seaweed, sand, salt flow and bob past and around me. Are my eyes open? They must be. They are gritty and painful. Not as painful as no air. I’m thinking of the mistake I made in turning my back against the ocean, the indeferential ocean.
            I’m pushed, again, toward the shoreline. The sand grabs at my arms, my hair, my face pulls my swimsuit off me. Sand gets into every space of me. In my ears, my eyes, my nose, my… Finally, the ocean, the hungry ocean, lets go of me, disgorges me. Air comes in a sweet and hacking breath. I can’t believe everyone on the beach sees my nakedness. The ocean, the thieving ocean, has stolen my swimsuit.


Ode to Boys

       When my boys are gone, I miss them. If they’re gone for an hour, a day, a week, or more, I miss them. I miss them when they’re not following directions. I miss them when they are angry and when they can’t keep their rooms clean. I miss them when they’re chasing the dog. When they are rolling on the floor laughing with each other, I miss them. I miss them when I’m in class and when I’m at school. When they got to their dad’s, their Nan’s or across the street for an hour, I miss them. When they won’t leave me alone in the bathroom, when I trip on their dirty clothes and when I find Legos in the show and cut my foot, I miss them. When I need a break, I miss them. When they are doing chores, I miss them. When I want so badly for peace and quiet and some time to myself, I miss them.
       My boys take up so much of my heart, my mind, my time, my energy, my thoughts. They make me laugh, cry, yell, they make me happy, sad, angry, frustrated and worried. They have given me all the wrinkles on my face and the grey hairs on my head. They are the cause for my extra lumpiness and the line between my eyes. They fill my eyes and ears, my arms and my heart. They are my soul and for all of these things, EVERY SINGLE ONE, I love them.


The Grapejuice story

         Grape juice spews from my sister’s mouth as she leans out the window letting a guffawing laughter chase it. Her long blonde hair is flying out in front of her face as we speed along some back road full of twists. If there were cars on the road in either direction, they probably got sprayed. I can imagine them standing, scratching heir heads puzzling over the purple spatters.
My sister's version
         As the grape juice escaped, it splatted against the side of our trying-to-be white car. It would have sounded like a gush of water falling suddenly from a bridge overpass onto a windshield. But there was no sound for us. From within the cabin, the loudest possible version of Conway Twitty or Ronnie Milsap pounded against our ears making any other sound drown. 
         I have not idea what we were laughing at. With the music up so high, likely we were just making faces, trying to make each other do exactly what happened.
         When we eventually paused in the torture of our dad’s aimless and thunderous driving, we were still giggling. Covering the back half of the car was a Rorschach inkblot of sticky purple grape juice. My dad became one of the imagined scratching-his-head-and-wondering-what-happened. When we saw the look on his face – and realized we weren’t in trouble for it – for, in truth, dad had no idea what happened, we wrapped our 7- and 10-year-old stick arms around each other to keep from collapsing on the ground with laughter.
         Mom just got out the camp stove and made lunch.


Vomit Cracker (inspired by Annoying Orange)

            I popped the delicious-looking sample in my mouth without even bothering to see what was actually there. Cracker, check. Tomato, check. Some kind of spread, check. All very benign. As I make my first crunch on the crispness of the cracker, my expression changes from, “Ha! Free sample!” to “wtf is this?”
            Had someone previously and thinly vomited on my cracker, miraculously avoiding all the surrounding crackers? Was my tomato slice the horrendously squishy and near-to-falling-apart-rotten that its’ neighbor was not?
            I look around for the garbage can that usually accompanies a sample area: A place for toothpicks, napkins those miniature plastic spoons…but no! No receptacle in sight! Ok, a napkin then – umm, also a no-go. The crackers were already prepared and on a tray. I had grabbed one and started to walk away. I am now two steps from the sample-of-vomit peddler, eyes watering, gagging and looking wildly, madly around for somewhere to spit out this vile substance that is not the floor or my un-napkined hand.
            By the third step, I realize I am going to have to swallow this vile, emesis-covered cracker.

The following is a scan of a few pages of the book I created. 







There are around 20 more pages! 



Annoying Orange
Boys
Finger
Lover




Ocean





Ode to Boys

The Grapejuice Story




Vomit Cracker


If you made it to the bottom, thanks so much for looking! I have learned so much in this class, but mostly, just how to write!

Deb