Archive for December, 2006

Dec 11 2006

Profile Image of sarah flanigan
sarah flanigan

And Now…a Word From Our Sponsors…

 

(since it’s been rather solemn around here lately, I thought I’d take a break from the fiction and offer a laugh. This was sent to me by a friend in an email. I am not the author but I’d sure like to meet them and thank them for the chuckles.  sarah)

CHRISTMAS CAROLS FOR THE “DYSFUNCTIONAL”:

1. Schizophrenia — Do You Hear What I Hear?

2. Multiple Personality Disorder — We Three Kings Disoriented Are

3. Dementia — I Think I’ll be Home for Christmas

4. Narcissistic — Hark the Herald Angels Sing About Me

5. Manic — Deck the Halls and Walls and House and Lawn and Streets
and Stores and Office and Town and Cars and Buses and Trucks and Trees
and…..

6. Paranoid — Santa Claus is Coming to Town to Get Me

7. Borderline Personality Disorder — Thoughts of Roasting on an Open
Fire

8. Personality Disorder — You Better Watch Out, I’m Gonna Cry, I’m
Gonna Pout, Maybe I’ll Tell You Why

9. Attention Deficit Disorder — Silent night, Holy oooh look at the
froggy can I have a chocolate, hey pretty lights, why is France so far
away?

10. Obsessive Compulsive Disorder –Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells,Jingle
Bells,Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells,Jingle
Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle
Bells, Jingle,Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells,Jingle
Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells,Jingle
Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells,Jingle
Bells, Jingle Bells,Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells,Jingle
Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle ……

2 responses so far

Dec 10 2006

Profile Image of sarah flanigan
sarah flanigan

Face

 

A face looks out
at me
through the paint
that demonstrates it’s
image

And the longer
I look at it
the clearer it becomes
And the clearer it becomes

the more I wonder
who the face
belongs to

copyright 2006

No responses yet

Dec 09 2006

Profile Image of sarah flanigan
sarah flanigan

Becoming…

 

Let me be Nothing
floating free in timeless Eternity
Let me be a Universe
shining like a Gold Charm in space

I have seen the face of
God
and He has smiled at me
I have seen Angels’ wings
and heard the music
their harps sing…

I have watched
and waited to
be saved
I have hoped
and prayed
help would come…

I have spent Lifetimes
counting Time
passing by
becoming more
becoming less

© 2006

One response so far

Dec 08 2006

Profile Image of sarah flanigan
sarah flanigan

Silver Bracelets

 

Silver bracelets
and golden rings
hearts of lace
soft whispered words
warm smile
shining eyes
the promise of tomorrow
and the hope of today

Sweet moments shared
stolen in the night
remembered in the day
Secrets told
secrets held…
Dreams made true
life made sweet
time forgotten
and put aside…

The light that falls upon
your Golden Hair

copyright 2006

2 responses so far

Dec 07 2006

Profile Image of sarah flanigan
sarah flanigan

Be

 

Be not my adversary
but be my friend
Be not my opposer
but teach me to bend

Be not my advisor
but give me your ear
Speak not loudly
just that I may hear

Be not my path
but show me the way
Leave not my side
but know I might stray

Show me not
through your eyes
but through my own
Stand with me
but let me stand alone

Be not my keeper
but be my mate
Know that I love you
no matter our fate

Be not my shadow
but be my twin
Speak of my good deeds
and know of my sins

Be not my fire
but keep high the flame
Know my passions
and make me not tame

Be not perfect
but be what you can
Know that I give you
all that I am

© 2006

2 responses so far

Dec 06 2006

Profile Image of sarah flanigan
sarah flanigan

Christmas Dog

I put you in
a suit of Elf
and asked you not
to be yourself
No wag, no bark, no jump or drool
for just the season of the yule

So many pictures
I did take
and promised you
both shrimp & steak

You stood there mute
so mad at me
that I was worried
you would pee
and make a mess
for me to clean
while gloating like
some beauty queen.

No matter how
I begged or teased
you gave no damn
if I was pleased.

When at last
I was done
I let you loose
to have some fun
you took your chewie
jumped on the bed
made a face
and rolled back your head

But that’s okay
cuz you’ll forget
about the suit
and the hat.

And next Christmas
when you’re not looking
a new yule suit
I’ll be hooking
about your belly
so big & fat
and you’ll be wishing
you were the cat.

copyright 2006

4 responses so far

Dec 05 2006

Profile Image of sarah flanigan
sarah flanigan

Lonely Child

 

Sometimes I’m a
lonely child
and I wonder
from where
I came…
trying so hard
to come only
from myself
and so
by myself
I am…
distant and
discontented

Wondering
what the why
is
what the
where
and what for…
turning inward
I look for
an answer
Looking outward
for relief…
aimlessly wandering
the path of
my experiences
But they do not help…

Sometimes…
I’m looking for wisdom
I haven’t yet
gained
Yearning for
freedom
of invisible chains…

Sometimes I’m a
lonely child
feeling I’m the
only one…
looking about
looking above
my undaunting search
for the peace
of spirit
that someone said was there…

copyright 2006

5 responses so far

Dec 03 2006

Profile Image of sarah flanigan
sarah flanigan

David’s Angel

 

David was a good man. And everything about him said kindness and caring.

“Fuck Christmas!” he muttered after passing the 50th storefront display. “I fucking hate Christmas.”

The crunch of the snow underfoot serenaded him as he trudged along. His breath, a smoky fog led him to the train station. Thunk, went his book bag on the seat next to him. A little girl in a Christmas red coat, smiled at him and his heart softened. She reminded him of Emily at that age. He smiled back.

The little girl’s mother seared him with a look and pulled the girl along to another seat at the front of the car.

“For cripes sake,” he said to himself. “People are fricking paranoid.” He caught a glimpse of himself in the window and shut up. No wonder the little girl’s mother was worried. He looked like one scary dude.

He slumped in his seat and let his mind wander during the long ride home. He tried to do Christmas math in his head. If he didn’t pay this bill or went without new shoes and didn’t replace the bald tires on his truck he could get his wife something pretty. Not expensive or extravagant, like a pair of diamond earrings - too far out of his reach. Plus he had his girls too. Some books, a few CDs, maybe a little more. His head ached. From the beginning of time, it seemed to him, Christmas had always been a problem. A disappointment. Proof positive that he couldn’t do what he wanted for the three people in his life whom he loved more than anything. That he couldn’t shower them with anything their hearts desired stabbed at his heart daily.

The train slowed and signaled his stop was upon him. He rose, shouldered his book bag and shuffled to the exit. A split second before the doors opened he saw the little girl again, reflected in the glass. She smiled at him. And he thought he saw wings. Swoosh. The doors opened and the little girl was gone.

The two blocks home he took slowly, still thinking about what he would do for Christmas. He already worked all the overtime he could get - there just wasn’t any room to do more. He heaved a sigh and his breath fogged a cloud in the night air.

“David,” the voice came softly.

He stopped and looked around the empty street. Nothing there. No one there.

“You’re so damned tired now you’re hearing voices,” he scolded himself. The chill air made him shiver. He thrust his hands in his pockets and started walking again.

“David,” the voice came again - from nowhere, from everywhere.

“Who is that?”

He turned and there she was again, the little girl from the train. No longer in the red coat. No longer accompanied by her mother. But perched on the fountain in the square. She smiled again and warmth embraced David as though he stood at the edge of paradise.

“Who are you?”

“I am your heart,” she said in a voice that caressed his cheek.

He took a step closer. “Am I really seeing you? How did you get up there?” He reached out his arms afraid she would fall but she disappeared. “Where’d you go?”

No answer came, no children appeared. He went home.

Kathy was cooking in the kitchen and the smell of homemade soup made him realize he was famished. David slipped his arms around her waist. “Hi beautiful.” He nuzzled her neck. Her golden curls smelled of lemons.

“Ah, the warrior returns.” She giggled. “Hungry?”

Soon, he, Kathy, Emily and Susan sat around the table and it was all good. It was safe. It was home. It never stopped amazing him that he had such beautiful girls in his life. How blessed he was to have them. What he had ever done to deserve them he never knew. His heart ached again for all he couldn’t give them.

The girls chattered about school and boys and movies. They giggled and tugged on his beard when he tried to hug them. “Oh Dad.”

“What? You too big for your old dad to give you a hug?”

Rolling eyes, more giggles and they were off to their rooms and their teenage worlds.

He looked after them. “They are growing up too fast.”

Kathy smiled and shook her head. “We’re getting old too fast.” She cleared the table and filled the dishwasher.

“Want some help?”

She waved him off. “No, dear husband, I have it all under control. Go relax.”

He woke hours later, lying on the couch, television going. “Oh cripes.” He stumbled to bed - Kathy fast asleep - the house a silent cocoon.

***

“David…” The voice stirred his dreams into images of love and color. He nestled closer to Kathy, a smile on his face, a warmth spread through him.

“David, I am your heart…” the voice of the little angel girl came again. He opened his eyes and her face filled his field of vision. Her smile made him helplessly happy.

“Who are you, really? Why are you here?”

She took his hand and then they were flying. Above the rooftops, and traveled with the stars.

“It’s so beautiful,” he murmured. “Can I stay here forever?”

“Honey? Honey!”

David’s eyes opened and saw Kathy’s worried face.

“What?”

She let out a breath. “My God, I thought you were dead.” Tears sprang to her eyes and she pressed her cheek to his. “Are you okay? Are you sick?”

He held her tightly. “I’m fine. I’m fine.”

She untangled herself from his arms and scrutinized him. She put her hand to his forehead. “You feel warm, I’m getting the thermometer.”

He sat up in bed. “I’m fine,” he insisted. In fact, he had never felt better. “It’s just a little warm in here.”

She paused.

“You know me, I’m like a furnace when I sleep. Come on, everything is fine.”

She nodded, though her eyes didn’t believe him. “Okay. Okay.” She pulled her robe around her. “Up and at em then, time for breakfast.”

His day was like a dream - lovely in muted color and feeling. Nothing, no one, bothered him. His step was quick and easy. Life seemed so good and yet nothing had changed. He still worked a ten hour day. He still had a long commute to work and home. The air was still frigid, the world still covered in snow. But the smile never once left his face.

On his walk to take the train home he lingered and looked in the shop windows. They dazzled him. All gold and silver, sparkle and light. The jewelry store drew him in. A place he would normally avoid and knew he had no right to even enter opened its arms to him.

“May I help you?” the saleslady asked.

“I want to get my wife something nice,” he said as though he had the budget to shop there.

“What did you have in mind?”

The next hour was spent looking at diamond earrings for Kathy and gold necklaces for the girls.

The cell phone buzzed in his pocket. “Hello?”

“David!” Kathy cried. “It’s Emily!”

The world crashed down around him. “What? What about Emily?”

Kathy cried, unable to speak.

“Where are you? What is happening?”

“Huntington Hospital,” she sobbed. “Come now!”

***

Kathy and Susan huddled in green, plastic chairs in the corridor. Their tear-stained faces white with worry stabbed at his chest. He ran to them. “What’s happened? Where is Emily?”

“We were just fooling around,” Susan weeped. “Throwing snow balls. Just playing, Daddy…”

David couldn’t breathe and the world felt so small.

“She didn’t see the car. She slipped and…”

***

David stood vigil over Emily’s bed. She looked so helpless and pale. Hooked up to machines like some freakish life-sized doll. Kathy and Susan slept in chairs unable to fight the exhaustion any longer.

“Why, why, why?” his mind screamed.

There is no why,” the voice came again. And there she was, the little angel girl who appeared at will.

“Go away!” he screamed her. “Stop coming into my head!”

“You have to let her go.” She touched his hand.

“I do not! I won’t! You can’t make me!” He sobbed and clung to Emily’s hand. It was so cold. Why was it so cold?

“David…”

He put his hands to his ears. “No, I don’t hear you. I won’t hear you!”

He fought and fought hard but exhaustion captured him and he fell to fitful sleep. He fell down, down, down and could do nothing to stop it. Then she caught him and his landing was soft and sweet.

“Why do you catch me when I’m falling?” he asked.

She took his hand and led him down a corridor. It was so quiet, so still. “See this,” she said.

David was in the room where a little girl lie in a bed. Small, frail, barely breathing a breath. He shook his head. It couldn’t be. It was his little angel girl. Her father sat at her bedside, her hand to his cheek. He prayed in a whisper, he wept without sound. Her hand went limp.

“I don’t want to see this. I don’t. Don’t make me look,” David cried.

A light filled the room and a hand reached out to the little angel girl and she rose from her body to take the hand offered.

“I know what you’re trying to tell me. I know,” David screamed. “Why God, oh why?” His words echoed the little angel girl’s father.

She paused and looked back at them both. “I am your heart and shall never leave you.”

Blackness.

***

“Daddy? Daddy!”

David lifted his head at Emily’s bedside. He couldn’t believe his eyes - she was awake and making her funny face at him. “Is it you?”

She laughed like a little windchime. “Who else?” She tousled his hair.

He sat up. “But…the accident…you were…” He looked for Kathy or Susan but they were gone. “Where is your mom and Suz?”

“They went to the cafeteria. Don’t worry, they’ll be back.”

He couldn’t speak or stop the tears that ran down his face.

Tears sprang to her eyes too. “I’m sorry Daddy. I’m so sorry I was so stupid. I’m sorry I scared you.”

He hugged her the best he could. “No baby, it’s okay - Daddy’s here. It’s all okay.”

And as he hugged his daughter and thanked God for not taking her from him he saw his little angel girl smiling at him. “I am your heart, I shall never leave you.” And she became the sunlight that spread in the room and glowed warm and gold.

“I am your heart too,” David murmured. “Always and forever.”

6 responses so far

Dec 02 2006

Profile Image of sarah flanigan
sarah flanigan

I Gave You a Tie

 

I gave you a tie
you gave me a hat.
We trudged through the snow
winter’s white mat.

Our cheeks went all red
the air crackled cold
the wind blew right through us
but we were still bold.

Our hearts were alive
with good Christmas cheer
because my dear friend
we were always so near.

One response so far

Dec 01 2006

Profile Image of sarah flanigan
sarah flanigan

SPLOG ALERT!!!!!

I’m interupting our regular programming to make an announcement.

This website http://pierresccservice.com/ is a splogging machine. I happened upon it because it showed up as an incoming link. Lo and behold there was one of my stories. I left messages harrassing them - and I see now it’s been removed, but the site is filled with other people’s content.

You may want to visit them to insure they are not ripping you off.

My friend Writer Chick did a post about this a few weeks back. If you are interested in learning more about sploggers.

Anyway just wanted to give a heads up.

We will return to our regular programming now.

sarah

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