http://www.albany.edu/offcourse 
         http://offcourse.org
         ISSN 1556-4975
		
Published by Ricardo and Isabel Nirenberg since 1998
Have you noticed 
        how you cling to
        the banister going downstairs
        how you leave sticky notes
        on the counter, the mirror
        the fridge and forget to read them
        have you noticed 
        how you drive more slowly 
        get lost coming home from Lucky’s
        crawl like a banana slug on freeways
        unhappy cars honking behind you
        what of boots left listless
        no longer hiking alone with a bag
        of trail mix and a crumpled map
Have you noticed
        how you no longer pay attention to time
        watching old movies past midnight
  Apocalypse Now, Star Wars
        eating Oreos in bed
        crumbs sprinkled on the sheets
        waking to noon’s pointed light
        have you noticed 
        how you let laundry pile high
        dust settle on chairs
        bills stack on your desk
        while you read Alice Walker
        and write poems for your own pleasure
        have you noticed      
I am missing my reason for living
        I thought I had it right here
        in my pile of Important Things
        but all I see is a grocery list
        (scotch, canned soup, more scotch)
        and pages of instructions 
        on how to set my clock back an hour
        who cares
        so here I am calling to you
        from the bottom of a well
        where I have been living for months
        haunted by images of stealth,
        moments of anger, flashes of failure, 
        drowning in an riptide of regret
But more and more memories are becoming illegible
        fading like a Cheshire cat or invisible ink
        which is OK by me since what
        you don’t remember never happened
        (or do memories still niggle at night)
        did I really hit my child 
        cheat on my husband
        not include tips on my taxes
        fumbling toward forgiveness
        no idea how it all works
        help me out here
        do I need to email the gods
        or give money to World Wildlife
        do I chant OM for endless hours
        or buy a hair shirt from Amazon
        and where is my reason for living
        I am sure I had it right here
        under the Turn Off  alert from PG&E
        and an unopened notice from the IRS
        yet the future keeps showing up
        and that’s the good news
Polar opposites my parents
        like smooth and serrated
        like woven and frayed
        I floated for years like an albatross
        with no place to land
One stiff, logical, serious (father)
        singing Bach in the church choir
        coloring carefully within the lines
        always on time, never touching alcohol
        preferring puns to belly laughs
One creative, quirky, chaotic (mother)
        also depressed and often inebriated
        who never even noticed the lines
        as she painted huge canvasses
        with splashes of gaudy colors
A father who paid the bills and took us
        to the dentist, the doctor
        a mother who tossed spaghetti
        on the walls to see if it was done
        I chose my father, wanting to live
In a pi r squared world of perfect circles
        with rules and reason 
        but as I get older and brittle
        and more rigid in my ways
        as I stick to a comfortable routine
The dry ditto of duplicate days 
        I miss my mother
        not the abuse and the alcohol
        not the dark times of despair
        but the wild beauty that was wrung 
        from her windblown and weird 
        and whimsical bipolar cloud
Claire Scott is an award winning poet who has received multiple Pushcart Prize nominations. Her work has appeared in the Atlanta Review, Bellevue Literary Review, New Ohio Review, Enizagam and Healing Muse among others. Claire is the author of Waiting to be Called and Until I Couldn’t. She is the co-author of Unfolding in Light: A Sisters’ Journey in Photography and Poetry.