Neighborly
This is a neighborhood of gardens
garage sales and lawn art and, of
course, slogans, like “black lives
matter” and the ones that bring
together a set of slogans covering
all the bases, black lives again and
something about women’s rights,
immigrants, and gay rights, and they
remind us that love is love. Now
there are an endless supply of flags
some U.S. but mostly Ukrainian. We
live the times and capture the mood,
flowers of various shades and sizes
and now since it’s primaries time we
set up lawn signs endorsing one or
another of the candidates, Becca
seems to carry one street and Molly
another. We divide up along liberal
lines, signs, slogans and flowers, and
people sitting in lawn chairs trying so
hard to sell off things they no longer
have a use for and a few cars pull up
looking for a bargain. This neighbor-
hood has never been much of a bargain
basement but an easy spender of words.
In Line
Perhaps it’s instinct, perhaps it’s one of those cultural things
That grow up with us, become part of us through training and
Discipline, something passed on, parent to child generation to
Generation. We all know the rules, what we must do, and what
We must not do if we want to belong, fit in, like everyone else
Around us. We gather and quickly learn our place. This is what
Lining up is all about. It’s time passing, it’s standing and waiting
For something, the something we must believe comes next. This
Is how we belong, become members of the group, the group in
Line for the next show at the movie theater, in line waiting to
Check into our flight, in line for the cruise ship, in line for just
About anything we see as an objective, and they have the ability
Thwart our desire or need. They depend on our instinct and on
Our willingness to go along and be part of a group lined up in
Order, first come, first served. This keeps everything so civilized,
No crashing, no pushing and shoving, no demanding attention,
None of those things. Now we are in line, and we wait. We might
Complain but never too loudly. We were trained to do this and
Half of our lives will be used up this way.
Airport Waiting
Standard advice says arrive two hours before
Your flight, but in a small airport
The advice seems ironic.
Here we are two hours early
And now we wait
Collect in surprising numbers
Sit together by the assigned gate
And wait
Are we being set up?
Set up for a mass shooting?
Can’t we picture the gunman going by
The TSA oddly enough still armed.
The news will say something about our group
Husbands and wives, parents and children
Friends and relatives
All there
Following the standard advice
Two hours early, so why not become big news
We listened so carefully
And so here we are
Sitting ducks wanting anything beyond
This two hour wait
Two hours we’ll never get back!
J. K. Durick is a retired writing teacher and online writing tutor. His recent poems have appeared in Third Wednesday, Black Coffee Review, Literary Yard, Sparks of Calliope, Synchronized Chaos, Madswirl, Journal of Expressive Writing, Lightwood, and Highland Park Poetry.