“I’m
my own boss to the first time in my life,” I told a fellow tourist at a rest
stop on our way to the Chichin Itza Aztec ruins on the Mexican mainland in the
state of Yucatan. “I’m 65 and I’ve
never lived alone,” I continued to her attentive ear. “I went from my parents’ home
to college communal living to my first husband to my second to my third, Roger,
love of my life for 22 years. “Now that
he is gone—“ “Oh, I’m so sorry.” I waved it off, saying, “I’m OK. It’s just…different. Being my own boss.”
~~~
Virgin
The
woman
in
the window
is
the woman
in
the porthole
is
the woman
in
the mirror
a
trinity
unto
herself
what
no Android selfie
captures
the
woman
from
a condo
the
woman
in
a cabin at sea
the
woman widow voyager
by
herself
elusive
as the waves
~~~
With
that, we were summoned back to the tour van to motor on to the ruins. “To
be continued,” she remarked, leaving me to wonder, “What do I really mean
when I say I’m my own boss for the first time in my life?”
Certainly,
my parents bossed me. Parents do their jobs. My second husband was überbossy, beyond the point of emotional abuse. (Ergo divorce.) Throughout my marketing
career and teaching gig’s, I had platoon of bosses , er, supervisors. And
supervisors’ supervisors with a range of capabilities from none to superlative.
I am a boss of others: Husband #1, a few hundred students, and a score of
professional staffers, among them the administrative assistant who gave me a Boss
Lady mug nearly 30 years ago.
Last,
I have to confess, late in our life together, there were moments I bossed Roger
around. One time I went totally pissed-off parental unit on him, which evoked a
most sobering plea, complete with watery blue-eyed appeal, “Don’t treat me like
a five-year-old.” And I never did again. That’s not our way love worked.
But why
this boss metaphor? Am I being bossy with myself? Bossing myself around? Not
exactly a desirable trait. People don’t generally like much less admire bossy
people, right? I don’t. Fortunately, because I’m disciplined by nature and
nurture, when I tell myself, “Get the bloody blog post written,” it’s not in an
imperious tone. A gentle nudge is enough.
I
think what I really meant to say to the women at the pit stop was, “I don’t
have to answer to anybody but myself
for the first time in my life. I order of the day. I stay up all night if I wish, as I did twice
this winter. Until sunrise. And book an impromptu cruise that brings me
here to Belizean waters. Take mid-morning naps. Swim whenever. Walk wherever. Explore Aztec ruins. Write
anytime, anywhere, on full-time poetry safari.
But
no Roger, heavy sigh. No children. No pets. A score of good friends, many
cherished correspondents, a circle of poet-pals, a circle of humanists, but no
one in loco parentis calling the shots. Only me. I am the boss and she is in
after all. I answer to myself. Karla Linn, it’s time to hoist your butt out of
the deck chair and scatter some ashes into the turquoise Caribbean Sea. Let it
be. Or, as Roger would say, “Bouga, bouga.”
Pelagic
Do
not say
the
tide goes out
rather
it falls
coral
reef appears
another
another
secreted
shoals
exposed
as
turquoise retreats
to
horizon-deep blue
I
follow
shearwaters
flying
the ebb
~~~
Psyche’s Scroll Is
in Utero
My newest book, Psyche's Scroll, is in production for release this Fall from The Poetry Box Selects.
Psyche’s Scroll is
a post-postmodern book-length poem that invites readers to participate in a
woman’s psycho-social self-analysis as she struggles to move through and beyond
psychological trauma. Readers become voyeurs of the mind in a book of sometimes
bawdy, ballsy language, as well as sharp
insights into human behavior. Unpredictable, unconventional changes in cadence,
form, and patterning makes for an enriched poetical read.
Psyche’s Story is myth-making, it’s a
love story with a geeky streak. It’s also a schizophrenic story: half raw
emotion, half coolly cerebral. American master poet William Heyen referred to Psyche’s Scroll as “sui generis.” Poet,
blogger and editor of The Centrifugal Eye,
Eve Hanninen, called the book “a romping good
read. I think you have a winner here.” Book reviewers might identify Psyche’s Scroll as: “a hyper-contemporary
tour de force.” “gutsy” “forthrightly sexy,” and “this epic poem pushes at the
frontiers of what is possible.”
The image above will be the cover art for Psyche's Scroll. It was painted by Nard Claar and is titled "Inversion." Oh joy!
~~~
About those Mayan
Ruins at Chichin Itza
Chichen Itza was a large pre-Columbian city built by the Maya people of the Terminal Classic period. The architectural site is located in Tinum Municipality, Yucatan State, Mexico.
Yes, it's worth the adventure to get there. Just try to avoid the 94-degree wide-open sun in mid-afternoon. And, don't be disappointed: Visitors are no longer allowed to climb the temple steps.
~~~
Please enjoy more of my poetry with this further
reading:
- Please do visit Hedge Apple, a journal of the Hagerstown (MD) Community College, staffed by a terrific group of students doing some astounding work in the literary world. The editors have paired each poem with a musical track. Don't miss the match up of poems and music! Bravo! Bravo! to them all (and the consulting faculty). http://hedgeapplemagazine.com/?p=1915 ... http://hedgeapplemagazine.com/?p=1884 ... http://hedgeapplemagazine.com/?p=1830
- “#1: ABROAD THE VICTORIOUS, JANUARY, 1971” debuted (as did I as contributing poet) in L'Éphémère Review : http://www.ephemerereview.com/karla-linn-merrifield
- I’m indebted to Marie Lightman for including one of my poems in the “Shoes” issue of The Writers’ Café Magazine: https://thewriterscafemagazine.wordpress.com/2018/04/16/the-writers-cafe-magazine-issue-7-shoes/ (Please scroll to the bottom. I have the last words.)
- Always pleased to be among the bear creek haiku community. Here’s a recent one: file:///C:/Users/Karla%20Linn%20Merrifiel/Desktop/Bear%20Creek%20Haiku%20-%20April%20kLM%20poem.html
- Of interest to fellow writers: my essay“Writing Impossible?” that was published in Hanninen Freelance Editing in April. Thank you, Eve Hanninen! http://hanninenediting.wixsite.com/freelance/single-post/2018/04/06/Writing-Impossible
- In print is “What Happens When I Dream of You” in Journal of Modern Poetry 2018. The collection is being sent to Cheeto-in-Chief in the White House. Below is the cover art: