We are the game they play.
The old, overplayed game on the top shelf.
Flimsy cardboard unfit for a board game.
Ages ten and up.
Falling apart and dirty.
It’s on the shelf nobody can reach without a struggle.
Standing on your tip-toes on a chair is the only way.
We are the pieces,
Colorful slender and tall minions.
Obedient and stripped of free-will.
We do not understand
Why we do what we do,
Go where we go,
Say what we say.
We cannot rebel against the rules.
We simply cannot manipulate our way,
Cheating and backstabbing,
Until it is complete.
No, we are not cheaters.
Still, it consumes us.
Breaking our once-passionate spirits.
Our spirits that could once demolish the Great Wall of China,
Together.
No loophole can save us now.
The rules are far too precise to make mistakes.
This game is far too complex,
With its many twists and turns.
It’s overflowing with contradictory limitations.
Our chipping paint and slowly breaking bodies show
We are just as worn down as the game itself.
Overused.
Our plastic faces are melting away.
Limb by limb we are
Growing much too exhausted to proceed.
The fun of this game is growing sparse.
No longer can it shatter silence with laughter.
No longer can it peel away a frown.
No longer does it intrigue.
Now it only produces tears.
Frustration.
A game like this is sure to be in next year’s garage sale.
On the fake-oak table,
Two dollars or less if bargained with.
It is far too obsolete to keep.
And yet this game is our fixation.
Our loathed habit.
It’s time to abandon it,
Cold turkey.
It’s time to tell you: I finally quit.
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
What I Needed To Say
Posted by Cassie at 8:45 PM 1 comments
Tuesday, March 4, 2008
A Time When My World Changed (final version)
I zip my zipper in the back of a red gown.
Its rough red material always gets stuck in the zipper.
I slide on my shimmering white gloves and feel as beautiful as a princess.
I float to your sunroom.
You have a tea party set up.
Me with water.
You with coffee.
We even have those little sandwiches.
Turkey and cheese, my favorite.
All was lost just so I would crack a smile through chapped lips.
These thoughts drown me later as I turn down your dinner invitation.
I am sorry.
I know you understand, you are too forgiving.
Remember when you surprised me Christmas morning that one year?
Daddy was too busy working.
We played that video game until it was shot.
I won every time.
And I remember how crazy I was.
With my obnoxious elephant lion song.
And my never-ending energy supply stored in my soul.
I thank you for putting up with me.
That must have taken so much out of you.
But this was all a few years ago.
I have grown more now.
I'm dating now.
And driving.
I'll even be getting a job soon.
Walking into that building that one day sent my
Stomach plummeting to the floor.
Sure, it seems so inviting with its homey look,
Warm colors, and bright patterns embedded in the furniture.
But it is the one thing that'll flip your world.
I am in my only dress, brown and stiff.
Combined with painful heels, flat and black.
I shuffle my way down the aisle.
Sitting down in the front row.
I glance up at your wedding picture framed on a pedestal.
Salty and sour, liquid escapes my tear ducts,
Down my rosy cheeks.
Slithering its way down until it reaches my dehydrated mouth,
Leaving a dreadful aftertaste I can't swallow away.
Still, it feels unsatisfied
And sends more to finish the job.
So you're asking me when my world changed?
Well, that's easy.
The day I lost my best friend.
My hero.
My grandmother.
Forever.
Posted by Cassie at 11:08 AM 1 comments
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
A Time When My World Changed (version 2)
I was zipping my red gown and sliding on my shimmering gloves,
I float down to the sunroom.
You’ve set up a fancy tea party setting.
You gave me water and set yourself with coffee.
We even had those little snacks.
You really went all out to make me happy.
These thoughts choke me later when I say I don’t want to eat dinner with you.
I’m sorry.
I know you understand, you are too forgiving.
Remember when you surprised me Christmas morning that one year?
We played that video game until it was fried because Daddy was working.
I won every time.
And I remember how crazy I was.
I thank you for putting up with me.
That must have taken a lot out of you.
But this was all a few years ago.
I have grown more now.
I’m dating now.
And driving.
I’ll even be getting a job soon.
You wouldn’t believe what I found a few weeks ago!
A letter you had sent me a long time ago.
When we decided to be pen pals, even though we lived only a few blocks away.
I couldn’t help but laugh.
You always know how to make me smile.
But walking into the building sent my stomach plummeting to the floor.
I was in my only dress and painful heels.
I suffered through all that just for you.
I sat down and looked at your picture.
Then people began talking about you.
And I couldn’t stop the tears from flooding my eyes.
So you’re asking me when my world changed?
Well that’s easy.
The day I lost my best friend.
My hero.
My grandmother.
Forever.
Do you think it has good fluency?
Do you think I worded things well?
I'm a bit worried that I told instead of showed.
Any other comments you want to tell me?
Thank you!
Posted by Cassie at 10:05 PM 4 comments
Tuesday, February 12, 2008
My Play
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
[a silence erupts between the two that lasts for quite a bit before BYRON breaks it]
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
[another silence erupts that lasts for a bit longer than the first]
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
LEXI
BYRON
[LEXI finds her mom]
MOM
LEXI
MOM
LEXI
MOM
LEXI
[LEXI goes back to the car and BYRON drives her and himself back to her house. BLACKOUT.]
Posted by Cassie at 11:08 AM 0 comments
