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Thirsting for Lemonade
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Interactive Press
Thirsting for Lemonade
Heather Taylor Johnson is the author of two books of poetry: Exit Wounds (2007) and Letters to my Lover from a Small Mountain Town (2012). She was a poetry editor for Wet Ink magazine from 2005-2012 and is currently the poetry editor for Transnational Literature. She has a PhD in Creative Writing from the University of Adelaide and tutors in Creative Writing at Flinders University. She is an ex-pat hailing from all over the US, now ecstatically relocated near the Port in Adelaide. She lives with her partner Dash, their three young children – Guthrow, Sunny and Matilda – and their spunky dog Tom. Her first novel, Pursuing Love and Death, will be published by HarperCollins in 2013.
Interactive Press
The Literature Series
Thirsting for Lemonade
Heather Taylor Johnson
Interactive Press
The Literature Series
Interactive Press
an imprint of IP (Interactive Publications Pty Ltd)
Treetop Studio • 9 Kuhler Court
Carindale, Queensland, Australia 4152
[email protected]
ipoz.biz/IP/IP.htm
First published by IP in 2013
© Heather Taylor Johnson, 2013
All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of the copyright owner and the publisher of this book.
Printed in 12 pt Cochin on 14 pt Snell Roundhand.
National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry
Author: Taylor Johnson, Heather.
Title: Thirsting for lemonade / Heather Taylor Johnson.
ISBN: 9781922120366 (ebk.)
Subjects: Australian poetry.
Dewey Number: A821.4
Also by Heather Taylor Johnson:
Letters to My Lover from a Small Mountain Town (IP, 2012)
Acknowledgments
Front Cover Image: Carol Lefevre
Jacket Design: David Reiter
Author Photo: Anna Solding
Some of these poems, or variations of them, have appeared in the following journals: Antipodes, Bukker Tillibul, Etchings, Finger, Five Poetry Journal, Four W, Griffith Review, Mascara, Nonce Journal (US), Poetrix, Prosopisia (India), Social Alternatives and Transnational Literature, as well as in the anthology Small City Tales of Strangeness and Beauty. Full credit to the General Mills headquarters in Golden Valley, Minnesota, where “Hunger’” was hung on a bulletin board. I am grateful to Arts South Australia for a grant to assist in the completion of a first draft of this manuscript.
Thanks and squeezes to my sis-was, Cassie Flanagan Willanski, Cathoel Jorss and Kerryn Tredrea, for a wonderful year of workshopping and sisterhood. Also to the usual suspects for general writerly comforting and support: Anna Solding, Rachael Mead and the fabulous former KPT (Bel Shenk, Kim Mann, Lucy Alexander, Shen and Tim Sinclair – will our poems ever cease popping up in books?) Thanks also to Carol Lefevre, and to David Reiter and the rest of the IP staff. Love to those who have inspired so many memories: Mom, Dad, Tony and his house of girls, Liz, Rebecca, Fletch and the rest of the Fredericksburg crew. And, as always, thanks to Shirley and Les. My biggest thanks go to Dash, Guthrow, Sunny and Matilda, who will always be my home.
Things…
Things
Familiar yet
the fabric of this couch
still un-stretched,
no smudges or stick
on the white shag carpet
where my toes warm themselves
and fiddle.
Home is a relative term.
This family meeting
festive, somber
we joke as brother and sister do
while Mom lays trays of dip
and Dad spreads out
the papers.
The last time we met for
‘the discussion of the wills’
I was too young to drive
though I had a say in euthanasia.
Now I am grown, I’ve flown faster
than the sun and turned back time
to be here, where
the dishes are the same
but I’m unsure
in which cupboard they reside.
Residence is impermanence.
Dad with his lips like mine
asks if there is anything we want to claim
so nothing becomes messy.
I’m stuck on claim and mess.
Mom is busy, asking about jewelry,
wouldn’t I want
jewelry?
I’m thinking it’s the things
that are meant to sum them up.
My brother and I are still, save for my toes
in the carpet and his allergies waiting
for the rain.
Everything Rolling Stones to my dad
because this is how we’ve related
thought the other really cool
sang words aloud on family road trips
and years later over tequila.
My father gushes quietly,
as is his way
with pride.
Thunder rumbles in my stomach and briefly
we look into each other’s eyes
mother daughter
father son
mother son
brother sister
daughter father
husband wife.
The breeze through the lanai has become wind
and swelled to a howl, my skin pimpling
and I rub my arms, dream of ugg boots
imported into Florida.
Do you want a blanket?
Then as if to counterpoint:
Your piano, ignoring shipping and the trauma
of the riotous waves, a large crate splintering
what would be my lingering pain.
Why would I want the baby grand
when at nine – don’t you remember –
I became so frustrated
with my mom’s teaching
I stopped playing the piano?
What about five – remember the tiny
ballerina behind you all around
as you played straight-backed and wrists
relaxed because I will never forget.
My brother’s fingers touch
waste time.
You ask this now?
He laughs.
We know it is not funny.
Keith Richards and JS Bach
and the shouting rain
on the condo’s roof
keep a heavy beat;
the steady gutter of water
like strings.
The Souvenir
I do not wish to contain anything –
not the feel of the beaded cove drying on my skin
or the taste of rum on my tongue
which flowed down my throat
like crisp water piped-in direct
from the billowy clouds that floated above
or you or the sunset
or the breeze which played with the bubbles in our bath
and the feel of your toes caressing my neck –
but I will buy this pareu at the tourist price:
to wrap round my body
which will soon drip of another ocean
and smell of another harder earth
which will cover me as I rise from our bed
make room for the sunlight on my shoulder
and make for our son a cape to wear
w
hen he flies from home.
I do not intend to gather time
and fold it into creases
because it is succinct as Xs
on a paper calendar
bound by the smooth edges
of two airline tickets
but we are feeling people
the tangible essential
the pareu vital.
Daydream
This is my daughter
this, my arm cradling
her neck and these
are her eyes.
Deep rush of white wet
and sweet through
my breasts: a mix
of pain and satisfaction.
And so I feed her. And so she grows.
And those her fingers around my own
and that is her suck - mix of pain
with gentle bliss.
On the mantel not a metre away
my parents beyond an ocean,
there and here
but never really here.
Caught-out rapture
I knit memories that mean love
and then pretend they are here –
and those are their eyes
watching me look at my daughter
and that is my father’s
arm round my mom:
a mix of pain and a daydream.
Why Australia?
...this hills hoist
formidably crooked
frayed and full with plastic pegs
primitive in metal, weathered and smooth.
I do not miss the clothes drier.
The clinking of zippers and thudding of weight
the smell of electricity clinging to socks.
I’ve lived long enough to know
this is a metaphor for something.
...this hills hoist,
it rotates in front of me
dancing to the birds that chatter in crowds
basking in the radiance of a three o’clock sun
celebrating a wind
I’ve only ever felt in spring.
4 Strings of Beads
It is a small thing,
4 strings of beads that frame the passage
to our backyard curtain-style.
Break them
and each wooden turquoise bead has no bearing on anything;
each plastic yellow one was simply made in Taiwan.
But whole, there is significance,
and significance inside of that.
My first house out of home
I remember stringing them late at night.
Freedom was an overused word
and it was mine
and it was quiet
and good.
I hung them on the wall at the head of my bed
reaching from ceiling to pillow
and when I laid beneath a man
I could look up and remember
that I owned the moment
that it was mine
and it was free
and it was good.
Now these 4 strings of beads
lay bare my history and move beyond:
to screaming children, to grass
and garden, to the limitless sky.
Linger on
so I’m sitting on my floor you’d be happy
to know, cross-legged chain smoking listening
to the Velvet Underground
seemed as if the world fell hard
on you that summer, grinned
like a maniac humming her name
a quarter of a lifetime for an incense holder
made from driftwood she found in Cancun
or the painting she wanted you to have
because at seventeen you were her muse
or maybe the dogs, goddamn Scotties
they barked at squirrels all day
you could’ve sworn it had been a week
but we both knew that the moon was full
and had been so four times before
you sat alone, barefoot, cross-legged
listening to the Velvet Underground
letting ink drip every day
a kind of blood forming words
because it was a comfort
I could not give
life had been easier the summer before
when we spent seven dollars and bought that first album
thought we’d been witness to Lou Reed’s first breath
over a six-pack of Foster’s in a muggy Atlanta
one-bedroom downtown grit red corner house
we tried to understand it all
I remember your long, wise face
the soundlessness of your airy laugh
the slump of your shoulders, those patched-up jeans
bless Lou Reed who had taken his first
and all of his consecutive breaths
in a time and place we will never know –
bless us for trying to imagine.
My Father
In a forward move toward the second phase
of the day that held within its grip
the loosely structured walk on the coast
the playground and the fish and chips
the perusing of the grocery aisles
and the walk past the old freight trains
we returned to our tent for one last swim.
When the wind picked up, the swimming
the chatting the laughing had ceased
& in that moment
I put my hand to my chest to catch my breath
gulp the frenzied flow of air and felt the space
of the missing pendant I’d worn
for twenty-three years.
The groover enlightened my father an Aries
just like me at seventeen had worn the horns
of a silver ram around his neck
and at fourteen I’d watched him clasp it
at the back of mine
& in that moment
all I really understood was that I had become
a groover like him
one of the enlightened
now somehow with family values
summed up in a necklace.
Somewhere in Port Lincoln it lay
like a 20 cent piece not-so-shiny anymore
in places scraped with time and the touch
of my fingers feeling forever feeling
and in its absence I saw the past
his present you still wear that smile
but felt the bareness of his spirit
no longer clinging to my chest.
So what is left?
Of course I cried.
It felt as if my father had died.
Hunger
Post package brown
the loveliest of colours
straight off a slow boat from America.
I know my childhood sits inside.
I smile like I’m seven
sound out the name aloud: Star –
the nurse from Idaho
who promised a six-month pregnant me
no child she knew would grow up without Cheerios.
Not talking the Cheerios I saw here in the store
the white boxed sugar-sweet ill-marketed import
to an imagined Americanised Australian mum.
but Cheerios:
the original in the bright yellow box
retro logo, good for the heart
taught every Yankee baby dexterity
in picking up each unadulterated O
Oh! and I open the package
then open the box then
handful the cereal into my mouth
before I’ve even opened the door;
a dozen or more tiny Os
the formation of the letter M
singing on my lips.
Because it’s not that they’re luscious
or a delicacy by any name
but rather a staple, practical
uplifting in simplicity
and can I ever forget t
he morning
while I wiped down counters
as I talked on the phone
of the joys of seeing my children eating
Cheerios for breakfast:
You’ll have to find an Australian cereal.
It’s silly to spend all this money.
My heart broke momentarily
for all that my mother could not comprehend:
identity in an air-tight bag
postage 13.26 US dollars.
The Hundred Dollar Blanket
It is not as if it were a cloud
or a beetle digging in the earth
or a foetus or a flame.
A piece of pink and lime floral fabric
in a small silver picture frame
is only material
yet I’m lost in the marvel of its function:
how he lay on it, we squirmed on it
and slept then woke to spill red wine.
How we paid the hotel manager
one hundred dollars for the damage.
And it is not as if it could experience action
or reaction, as if it had perception
like objects of nature or the divine
but it sits just so
doing what it does
phenomenally.
The Fooseball Table
My heartland lay in compact splinters,
wood that has aged better than I.
Metal shoots when in use and ca-ching contraptions
resounding an anthem I was not forced to learn in school
or sing during summertime baseball games.
It is not the ordinary keepsake one might consider
when a fire threatens to destroy a home
for it cannot be folded or crumpled in arms
and it takes two grown men to shuffle it a plain metre.
Identity is funny that way.
Seeing my foundations reflected in Plexiglas
felt in the blow of a single white ball
shot from the goalie travelling the field
and reaching its destiny
untouched by foreign obstacles—
odd, to say the least.
But who am I to choose the hows and whys
when I’ve hardly had control of the wheres?