Read to me a lullaby and feel it intrinsically,
Like the strings singing in a child’s first music box.
Free to me recovery from detriment,
Incidental like black keys,
More needs,
Capricious incidents.
Sing to me the naked lullaby
In your shining translucent soul,
Making melodies like simplicity and bravery
Until I, just for a twinkling, feel whole.
Simple things shine like gold and rings,
But you and I…we grind like miners searching for coal,
Pressure like a soul containing diamonds,
And plans to now one day grow old.
I want to be with you
Like you want the best for me.
In my sleep I recall to show not tell,
But I am too wakeful for subtlety.
So please now sing for me in perpetuity
The likeness of my everything,
And feel these wings when I will sing
Hapless and out of key.
Lullaby, baby, sweet soothing things
Are like diamonds on repeat,
Chiseled and sharp but too bright to ever scar repeat.
Make of me no tragedy and tell me something sweet,
Gentle and not trifling
Like an angel has taken their seat,
On the precipice between starlings and winter’s retreat.
WFR Got its start at the Turning Point Center of Chittenden County, and Nelly is leading a great group there now. Here’s some fantastic work, so dig in and share!
It Was My Turn
by Jordan
What did you say? What did you say?
Where did this come from? What made
you so dismayed?
I remember how much your
words played, how many syllables
it took to bring it all crashing down
Wall. Now it's my turn...
twist and churn, choke on your
words and fall away as the past
boils and yearns. I saw it all
and planned for the worst.
Now it's my turn to destroy your world.
There Was an Obstacle
by Jordan
Every turn, everyway
Every second of everyday
make progress
shout out
loud, hit a stone wall, break
the sound
I fight, I stay, I break
away, and I crave.
Repeat it all again and
again, every new obstacle
is a potential win.
It was My Turn
by Meghan O'Connor
It was my turn, always, somehow,
to hold the family secrets
like heavy weights
My fragile back, hunting me down
I saw that birthday card on the altered fridge
the one with the
the sad balloons, from a family
long estranged, and somehow
the balloon felt heavy too.
Why don't I just ever so
slowly float away?
Now I've got heavy weights
and these shadow fucking balloons
trailing my way.
Doesn't anybody anywhere
have something sharp
to pop them? So maybe just
maybe, they might go
away?
Who's got a knife,
or a sharp word, or
big hands to smother
them, to lighten my
load?
So I might be free?
Or is it still
my turn?
Somehow
always to carry
the weight?
The Next Turn I Took
by Shauna
I am not sure it was the right one, the well lit street I used to drive down is now dark. Frogs and worms squirming anxiously in the rain as if there was something keeping them tethered to the pavement rather than into the grass, to their home. I drive swerving, trying to dodge, but all I think about is my next turn, not the frogs, not the rain, not the darkness. Where is the light?? Where is the fork in the road?! Maybe I should stop and talk to a frog. Does he know the way? Talking to this frog will surely bring more clarity than the contacts in my phone.
Just click the links below to listen:
Episode 1: Vanishing Point
Episode 2: Tolerance
Episode 3: A Golden Opportunity
Workshop leader April Patrick has been working with a great group of writers at the Turning Point Recovery Center in Bennington, Vermont. Here’s some wonderful work from group members there. Please don’t hesitate to read and share!
WALK IN THE RAIN by LenaMarie
Walk in the rain
to wash away the pain
Don’t wanna go out like Cobain
or with a needle in my vein
If I can just abstain
sober I can remain
but I feel insane
from the noise inside my brain
so loud it gives me a migraine.
I feel like I’m circling the drain
trying to refrain
getting on that long black train.
Sorry to complain,
but my brain
I need to retrain,
so I can heal the pain.
Thank You Nickolas by LenaMarie
My baby brother was kind.
My baby brother was so strong.
My baby brother was so brave.
My baby brother was wise beyond his years.
My baby brother taught me how to be a mom when I was only 11.
My baby brother taught me what loving someone really meant.
My baby brother even years after his death
still teaches me how to be a
better person.
So to my brother Nickolas,
I say thank you for teaching me kindness
when we didn’t see much kindness.
I want to thank you for teaching me strength
as your body grew weaker.
I want to thank you for teaching me bravery
when you knew the end was near.
I want to thank you for showing me wisdom beyond both our years.
But most of all I want to thank you for making me want to be a better
person, as good a person as you.
Because of you I want to be the greatness you could have become.
You were already so great by the age of only 12.
Thank you my dear brother for being you
and teaching me what the best
version of me can be.
In loving memory of
Nickolas Micheal Allen Burdick
2/8/99 - 12/20/11
BOOTCAMP by Richard Mayer
The train squeaks and chuffs to a halt. The doors open to spill out a new batch of recruits. The freshly shaved-headed bootcampers pour out of the doors and clamber onto the platform. They are greeted by Boatswain’s Mate First Class Mr. Greenfield. Greenfield is a scrawny, bowlegged, crusty lifer in what he always refers to as “This Man’s Navy.”
His first words to his audience are, “Alright you shitbirds, your mother’s not here!” and “Hop to it ladies! I don’t have all day.”
We’re all worn out from the eighteen hour train ride and almost no sleep.
“I’ve made a terrible mistake,” I say to myself. I refrain from saying, “Sir, I want to go home, Sir.” I retreat into my shell and glaze over.
“Are you crying, sailor?” barks Greenfield with an edge of sarcasm that cuts to the bone. Everyone laughs.
I don’t laugh. I feel hot shame and shrink into the ground. I’m seventeen. I have three more years to serve. The laughter turns to a murmur, as if everyone has taken on my shame.
“No Sir! I feel fine Sir!”
Greenfield reminds me: “Your mother’s not here, Boot!”
SON IN CALIFORNIA, 1997 by Richard Mayer
Descending America’s western edge
on a rental car blue sky Sunday
I am with my golden boy again
with sunglasses and tee shirt turban
Wrapped around his head
like an Arabian prince he sleeps
Yesterday when I wasn’t looking
The sun burnt his fair face,
and he protects himself now
from further insult
When he was a child he took refuge
in makeshift tents and cubbyholes
Private worlds where he was safe in his aloneness
For he has been alone in beauty and in pain
And watching him sleep now
I take comfort that he finds relief in that same familiar way
But I know I can’t keep him from sunburn or heartache
REMEMBERING DENNIS by Richard Mayer
The last of the sober cowboy poets has left the building, and things won't be the same around here. Dennis's stories, (and boy he had some stories) were colorful, poignant, and sometimes true.
He'd be the first to tell you, with a central casting Irish twinkle in his eye, "Never let the truth get in the way of a good story." Yes, he had an Irish storyteller's gift for a bit o' the blarney, yet he was probably one of the most honest of our members when it mattered. I don't think anyone's attention ever drifted when Dennis was holding court in a meeting, because he had so much to say and always said it in the language of the heart.
Dennis inhabited a world of jakey bums, tickle bullets and cash register honesty. His stories were laced with these colorful gems. A favorite of mine was the one about rolling off a freight train and careening down the stairs of the old Centerville where his sober journey miraculously got its start.
Long before he passed on, whenever I heard a train whistle, I would think of him and smile. Dennis's gratitude for the sober life was obvious, and yet he was stubborn in his concern that the program might change his personality. As far as I can see it didn't, except for the quiet generosity in his considerable commitment to helping other alcoholics. I know he was a praying man, because so many of his sentences began with the invocation JESUS CHRIST!
I met Dennis at the nooner, when we were both brand new and a bit ambivalent about sticking around. We did and gradually got comfortable with the terms of our surrender, which in the long run turned out to be the best deal in town. Dennis met Annie in a hail of tickle bullets, and a great love story ensued. I treasure having known the two of them, constant reminders of the simplicity of the program: just show up, don't drink, go to meetings.
So when you hear that train whistle, think of Dennis. He was one of the great ones.
This was a joint writing experiment in which we (April Patrick, Suzanne Wessler, Barbara Paterson, and Sara S.) each added a line or lines and passed the notebook to the left when the two-minute timer went off. The prompt was: “We are not saints. The point is that we are willing to grow along spiritual lines.” -How it Works, AA Big Book)
WE by Suzanne Wessler, Sara S., April Patrick
Honor thy Higher Power. Honor thy step work.
Humans are messy, prickly, stumbling.
No one’s perfect— Amen to that!
Spirituality is the belief that there is something greater at play.
We have no idea how big the universe is or what or who made it,
only that it was done by someone or something much greater than
a polar bear in size & power
sleeker than a seal
stronger than a dive-bombing eagle
who powers herself out of the ocean
clutching a flapping flounder.
I get drunk. We stay sane & sober.
We succeed like a dancing hive
of bees connected
In vibrating symbiotic
togetherness.
WONDER WOMAN IS SO TIRED by Suzanne Wessler
-after Kyra Wilder
Wonder Woman is so tired, she can barely keep her eyes open. Tired of her
eyeliner, lipliner, spray. She’s so tired.
Holding that can of Wonder Woman hair spray - scented with ozone, patchouli
and lemonade - her biceps tremble.
Wonder Woman is so tired, her wrists weighed down with bullet-defying
bracelets.
Tired and beautiful, beautiful and weary of saving the girls from wolfish men, the
boys from eating their cereal with their daily dose of macho. Wonder Woman is
not macho. She’s not in menopause but has paused from men, mankind not being
kind enough, strong enough to love and be tender.
Wonder Woman’s cape flutters. Her hair does not move. Her legs straddle the
earth like a goddess. Her cobalt blue eyes are stern, red lips curled in delighted
disgust as she turns away; the W glows like a dying star on her waist.
What a waste, she thinks, and wishes she was not tired.
Lena by Suzanne Wessler
(a little salute to a co-writer in recovery at the W4R workshop)
Lena, Lena, have you seen her? Writing up a storm of what’s inside her head,
sometimes hope, sometimes dread, often love and rage and pain,
but always pure and real is her refrain.
Pure intention to stay the course and speak her truth:
the truth of life free from drugs or drink, the truth of recovery to freely act and
think.
A Prayer to the Goddess of Recovery by Suzanne Wessler
Oh, fertile Goddess, sharpened, brown and smoothed by female hands:
Bring me abundance of love and compassion.
Protect me from the empty womb of spirit.
Fill me with juicy swimming sobriety,
Then grant me the courage and skill to nurture this sobriety
As I would my own child.
Lap of God by April Patrick
My ma was a sunflower, Pa was a perch
Great-grandpa a moonshine bootlegger
Grandma's house was the Lap of God.
For the hell of your grisly death, I thank you Ma,
for it jettisoned me from your Womb at last,
forced me to rely upon The Old Ones.
Ten copper Junebugs
Three little monsters,
Four little ghosts,
Three pellucid geckos,
Three hundred sugar-ants
inhabit Ma’s house when she dies.
Slowly testing her timelapse-wings,
Ma swoops out under the awning and
Flies away from her body.
Afternoon sun on Loblolly Pine
Needles shimmer silver
like Christmas tree tinsel or
fibrous filaments of frost.
Swallowtails and wasps smooch
Lavenders’ luscious blossoms.
An aggrieved squirrel sounds a
Querulous alarm.
Leaves of the Chinaberry rustle and
Rustle, a soporific hush.
Grandma rocks on her porchswing, smiling at the breeze,
drinking sweet tea with lemon. She pampers hen-&-chicks, Kalanchoe,
ferns, & roses, feeds me at age 4 little mugs of sweet creamy coffee,
bottomless bowls of Neapolitan ice cream,
hot chocolate pudding, chicken-n-dumplins, &
Miracle Whip-slathered roast beef sandwiches.
She bathes me in the sink with crumbly cubes of
lavender bath salts wrapped in gold foil.
She scratches my back with a fireplace matchstick until
I shiver with bliss.
She rocks me to sleep on her doughy belly.
These were my days of yore.
Grandma’s gone, too, to the
Great Beyond.
Gone sixteen years now.
Benevolent Old Ones,
Hallowed Great Spirit,
Thank you for these Blessings!
When I die, will I understand & love all in a flash
of awe and oneness? Will Bliss overflow me?
Will we cruise on sunny cumulus clouds,
belly-laughing?
All Your creations & all the Gods rejoined together?
That, or something better
PORTRAIT OF AN ARTIST AS A YOUNG WOMAN by April Patrick
This is you on your second day of first grade, standing in the driveway between the orange Vega hatchback and the white Ford station wagon. Your four year-old sister stands barefoot beside you in a long, Scooby Doo and Scrappy sleepshirt. You wear a bright pink and butter yellow satin jacket like the Pink Ladies wear on Grease only prettier, and you carry a daffodil yellow and fuschia plastic lunch kit with Miss Piggy riding a motorcycle on it. Miss Piggy is wearing shiny silver knee high boots like George Clinton of Funkadelic would wear.
This is you in the Fleetwood Flair motorhome on your family’s great cross-country motor home trip in 1986. We’re about to hit the waves at Carmel Beach in CA. Standing beside your sleepy-eyed, mustached, furry-chested dad, you wear a one-piece bathing suit, slicked-back short hair and braces. Your sister is standing up on the fold-out single bed on the other side of your father. She’s wearing her one-piece bathing suit and Dad’s baseball cap that she’s probably just swiped off his head. Your sister looks like a gymnast, but she’s on the verge of sticking her tongue out at the camera. Your mom, who’s behind the camera, has likely been nagging her to irritability, in the special way she has of couching questions with fearsome critiques tucked inside–like some kind of foulness-filled donut.
This is you holding your Bennington College diploma beside your dad on Commons Lawn. Your dad wears a nice khaki colored jacket and dress shirt. His smile is tender, toothy and real. You wear a little black dress–how slender you were in 1996! All that dancing! Thanks to T. Creach’s and S. Sgorbati’s excellent dance classes! Your hair is long, your makeup minimal, and your eyebrows overplucked. You both glow with joy, happy achievement and wonderment to be together in Bennington VT!
TO MY POP by Yukon Fonda
Hey Pop. The nights run cold, and I grow old.
Hey Pop, I wonder if you can see me.
Hey Pop, remember you’d pick me up by my
ears? You were so strong.
Hey Pop, remember swimming in the lake in December?
I thought you were Superman.
Hey Pop, the way you loved your girl–you were so damn classy.
Hey Pop, you told me to follow my dreams and not to be scared.
Hey Pop, you told me to stand for something even if I’m the only one standing.
Hey Pop, I think I’m strong as you now–maybe classy too.
Hey Pop, you left us on a Sunday. I never cried so hard.
Hey Pop, when I look back I smile, know it was worth your while.
I’ll see you again someday. Thank you, Pop.
PAINTED DESERT by JMMJ
Why was I here? Could not find a purpose
Found no one who cared
Went, wandered through places
Didn’t know where
Saw what I saw, froze me to stare.
I’d sit in the grass and say what the hey.
So much to grab, too much to pay.
I wonder why I came this way.
Why I was here. Found not me a purpose.
Found no one who cared.
I feared, young, outside myself.
I then feared me–I shut my mouth.
I stayed that way for many years.
I drank some wine and lost my fears.
Traumatized, I slouched my shoulders and
downed my eyes.
Afraid in crowds
I’d drink to socialize.
They took me in stray, gave me time and
their children to play. Ten years hence, I don’t recall
thanking them. It’s come to today. I’ve forgotten their names.
I thank them their ways with me. Their giving goes on.
I wish I recalled thanking them all. I thank them their ways.
ROCK ON MY ROOF by JMMJ
There’s rock on my roof, studded rock covered walls
Rock on my wood, crumbled and crushed
Mixed in with something
Applied with a brush
There’s rock in my yard where I step
Got little rock walls, piles of some left
Counter that’s broke under and around where I need the wood stove
Got pebbles and stones can be thrown
Some in your way, some polished and honed.
Rock holds up my home.
I long for when it’s silver, shiny, or gold.
I can spit in my hands, fill it with dust, roll it around,
make marbles and shots, lose them, not mind,
make me some when I got me more time.
Some rocks have been squashed. Some they just come.
The earth spits them out like the teeth of a bum.
Too big to budge, mountainously tall. Some you pick up.
The ones in your shoe make you can’t walk.
Some we see as not to be moved.
Some we give, so forever you’ll stay.
I describe them as hard—I say like my head.
Out of this rock, life came to live,
leaving my feet a place to reside.
Never gave it much thought–
never paid it much mind:
a rock of this size, hanging in space,
a rock so massive, no way and no need to escape.
Never gave it much thought—
never paid it much mind.
A rock of earth’s size, just hanging in space.
So massive, so vast, just hanging in space.
SWINGING by Denise R. Simon
I keep swinging away
Floating through the air
And I see you down there, riding that train
I keep swinging away
Breathing in deep
Hoping you can get some sleep
And I keep swinging away
Praying for you and hoping…
All I can do is keep hoping
And loving you until you love yourself
And we can keep swinging away
Floating through air carefree together.
SKYE by Denise R. Simon
The gift of a beautiful skye
Sweetness and loving
Being there always now.
How all that love came free
Came to me.
No inspiration filtering through
This skye is black not blue
Those golden eyes
Burn like sunny skies
So elegant and beautiful
But totally unaware
Thinking only about happy and run and treat
And I love you Mommy, my mommy
True beauty that is blissfully, completely,
Thoroughly unaware.
Somehow it doesn’t seem fair.
SWEAT by Carol McCaffrey
He pulled the washboard from the bucket
Rubbed the metal with his shakin fingers
It was all he could make sound from there
Days the whisky had taken its toll
No more ukulele, no more banjo
Just the forever beat of the washboard
Kept him alive
Kept his feet tappin
That and another shot of whisky
The obsession isn't as strong, there was a time I thought it would never go away. That it would always be there, holding on to me tight, never letting go, grabbing me at every turn, haunting my every dream. But the harder I work the less of a hold it has over me. They say it works if you work it, so I'm gonna work it cause so far it seems to be working and I am more than worth it!
I’ve Been Meaning to Tell You…
I’ve been meaning to say that I see you.
And I’ve been meaning to tell you that there is so much in my eyes when I see you.
I see struggle.
I see pain.
I see grief.
I see desperation.
And I also see Fire. Fight.
Imagination that never gives up.
I feel the energy of the fight you keep fighting, that I can’t fight for you.
But I can tell you that I see you doing it.
You're upright. Moving forward, even if it’s forward after many steps back.
You keep going, you keep stepping, and I wonder what you’re moving toward.
I wonder, because I know it’s something.
It’s important.
It’s meaningful and it’s life and it’s your life and
I’ve been meaning to tell you that you’re brave, and
Magically you, like no one else is-
Whether painting a mural to honor your dead friend who is invisible to everyone else, but now
never invisible again…
Or writing song lyrics that move me to shivering chills.
Or telling me a story in the way you do that makes me laugh and cry at exactly the same time,
all at once, like no one else can.
I’ve been meaning to remind you that your place in this world is like the top of the mountains
that you love so much, stretching toward the clouds.
Mysterious. Beautiful. Full of magic.
I wonder what’s up there?
I may never know, but I know it’s something and that’s all I need to know.
How It Shaped Me….
I don’t understand so many things…
Like how I used to love most all of every day
and how I thought the world was safe and kind
and how I believed in good things- like friends and magic and dreams and adventures.
And doing the right thing just because it’s the right thing,
And believing that that alone would make things okay.
And then addiction happened. Chaos. Destruction. Lies. Pain, and nothing that makes sense.
And then I got squeezed into a different shape and instead of feeling like a cloud spreading out
in the sky and softly filling up the day with the shapes of hope and life,
I shrunk.
I became hard and tight. Scar tissue.
I think in trying to protect myself, I clenched down inside myself and decreased my surface area
to allow as little exposure as possible.
I could not tolerate the touch of addiction, and its pain and hurt and fear.
But I don’t breathe well in that shape.
I want to expand back out into the softness of the clouds I see on many days up in the sky,
looking so peaceful and dreamlike.
I want to feel more like slow wind- coolish or just a little warm but always soft and gentle,
like the comfort I used to feel when my grandmother filled up the cookie jar and told me another
irreverent story and we could just laugh.
I still have that acorn cookie jar, and I can still smell the brown sugar smell now, 50 years later.
I want to return to the shape of easy laughter and deep breaths that contain the smell of love.
I Want To Forget It….
My brain. It won’t stop. It’s like tennis gone wrong and the balls are bouncing off walls that aren’t
even there. Thoughts, memories, shame- everything that’s gone wrong and it’s all my fault,
probably, and nothing good because you can’t remember the good when your amygdala is so
full of everything you want to forget. There is no room for the good when my brain is torturing
itself by assigning monumental importance to “the thing” I’ve done that I can’t even identify. It’s
almost arrogant, as if anything I’ve done should even have that much salience or take up that
much room in the universe.
And now it’s happening again- I can’t forget how selfish I am to want to forget…how dare I think
about letting go of the filler that would allow room for some peace if it were forgotten. Because
then I wouldn’t be doing penance any longer, and I can’t let that happen, I don’t deserve for that
to happen. So I’ll never let you forget.
But how about this…I’ll build a new room, make a new space to plant something different and
fresh- nothing fancy- even an old wicker basket on the back of a broken down bicycle will do- I’ll
just fill the basket with cool loamy soil and plant it full of wildflowers. Lean it against the shed out
in the garden. See what grows. Paint it turquoise blue, maybe. Look how beautiful that piece of
junk is now…and for a moment I forgot what was wrong not so long ago.
Magic comes from finding myself clean again a long time. After all my psycho-therapy, and cleaning out of my psycho-attic; after all that time and psycho deductibles, and sneezing in the afternoon psycho dust, and when it all clears and my relationship is still failing, I run into my Uncle Rick at the Price Chopper when he is buying kitty litter, and he tells me that he found the coolest place to work on himself and his Recovery.
“You still not drinking, hunh?”
“Yeah, Gregory. But even more exciting is the Recovery Center. There’s a bunch of meetings, and great people there, and it feels like they need some more energy. I heard one lady in the front room say the computers are down again. Well, I know computers. So I worked one afternoon on the two old desktops, and they were so thankful. The lady said ‘You worked magic. Thank you.’ But it wasn’t magic at all, Gregory. It was just me looking on a good place to work on being sober and then I gave what I could.”
“Sounds like Magic to me, man.”
My uncle smiles and nods.
At the Granite-Cutter’s Union Hall In Barre, on a summer’s evening we gathered for an end of the year celebration of Writer’s For Recovery program. For a year folks in recovery from Alcohol and Drug Addiction gather weekly with a facilitator to write creatively and support each other’s writing. The Writers for Recovery program is cleansing and healing, simple and profoundly liberating; a brilliant creation of Northeast Kingdom artists Gary and Bess.
I found, more invented a parking space beside a row of small SUV’s, compact cars, a saggy truck with a black bag of fragrant garbage and a gray Volvo station wagon. Leaving my windows open to vent my own blossoming ambiance of apple cores and yesterday’s milk container, I looked at the clock on my flip-phone and shook my head. Late, just like my dad. I had promised myself when I was a kid…Never mind. Go in, Greg.
I was expecting them to be started already, expecting them to be seated in rows with a speaker at the front, expecting them to turn around and look at me, expecting that I would mouth I’m sorry and that the silence would make me feel guilty. Instead the grand hall was flung with odd and regular couples standing, a man in glasses, a table with a sign-in sheet beside stack of books.
I opened a cover and looked down the Table of Contents and found my name, Gregory Wells, page 46. I looked up to see a woman smiling at me, and I know that I found the right place.
“I almost doubled the size of this garden, Anne. Gonna grow a double row for the food shelf! I used to struggle so hard in the spring to turn over the ground with a pitch fork, pull weeds with roots and soil clumps, and then my back was hurt for a day. After, I had to go through with a rake, and only then I would have a garden to plant seeds. Mound up rows for potato chunks, and make the rows fine enough to pant brown seeds, and hope and wait for rain. Then notice a line of tiny green. Look at it now, Annie. Look at how much tilled soil there is! I can grow a row of food for them because Trump is cutting funding.
Later, when we are having tea in the shadow and the bugs are just coming out, Anne says “I was thinking about how you are now two years after your divorce, how your ex-wife never wanted you to have a tractor because, well, for whatever reason. And now look at that, twice the garden for you, and you can grow potatoes for the food shelf. You are doing well, Greg. It is like a fresh start.” She swatted a bug on her neck.
If you don’t believe me, I understand. Sometimes I don’t believe me, and I’m living this life. The sober life.
This week marks two significant milestones. July 16 is six months weed free. July 17 is twenty-four years free from alcohol.
How has my life changed? Significantly.
I’m not suffering from erratic mood swings.
I’m not paranoid.
I don’t stink.
I don’t end up in the back of cop cars.
I don’t fall down drunk.
I don’t spend the night in jail.
I don’t bring strange men home.
I don’t have valuable items go missing from my home.
I don’t black out.
I don’t try to put the pieces of the night together by asking strange questions of the friends I was with who didn’t black out.
I don’t lose random pieces of clothing.
I don’t wake up hungover.
I do remember conversations.
I do respect myself.
I do take care of myself - physically, emotionally and spiritually.
I do read a lot more, and I remember what I read.
I do have a healthy sense of self-esteem.
I do love myself.
I do love you.
I do love my friends and my family.
I still count days. Do you?
This spring, I had the distinct pleasure of leading a five-week Writers for Recovery workshop with men incarcerated at the Northwest Correctional Facility in St. Albans VT. The participants in the group showed up, did the hard work of excavating deep emotions and difficult stories, writing down and sharing them, and supporting each other through the process. I wish we could have filmed and shared the whole workshop, as it would give many people about who is in prison and what they can offer the world. Thanks for reading, and don’t hesitate to share or comment!
Why I’m Not Good Enough
by Anonymous (Northwest Correctional, Swanton, VT)
Why I’m not good enough
probably why I was given up
so as a boy I look to the sky with wonder
counting rain drop hearing the thunder
got a little bit older and started to dig
a ditch big enough a ditch so big
that when I put down my shovel and realized
a hole so I large I was buried alive
so I studied others and what I wanted
the girls the drugs all these things
then I started to hide behind a mask
my life started passing by so fast
not knowing where I was headed now
though circling and bending down
I got ready for whatever was to come
whether it be death or sale I still had it
better than some
wishes I saw long ago that a family I had
If I had just saw back than I
wouldn’t be looking back
What Really Matters
by Anonymous (Northwest Correctional, Swanton, VT)
What really matters....? This is a question I believe at some point everyone on this planet will eventually ask themselves. Although, I would imagine the answer isn't on a Q& A platform, rather one of a personal nature.. So I guess the question is; what really matters to me..? Again, although the question truly is relative in nature correct? Although; straight forward the answers are going to change; so if you are asking me now in my current endeavors I would answer or might answer getting out, loving my son, being present in said son’s life. not using or staying sober.. Although if you'd have asked me this question back in October of 2023 my answer might have been finding my fix, arranging how and what I’d do to find my next one or who and when I'd have to see or hurt or with whom I might have to compromise with to get said fix. Again if you'd have asked me in June of 2008 my retort would have been finding my best friend’s body and getting answers about whether or not he’d survived our drowning and how I was about to proceed with the rest of my life; so what really matters? Well it depends on where one’s at in life and whether or not they're living their BEST LIFE....!!
Why I’m Not Giving Up
by Anonymous (Northwest Correctional, Swanton, VT)
Sad to say there’s no such
thing as luck,
why I’m not giving up.
I’m saved,
set free from sin,
that’s almost enough.
Why I’m not giving up
I have a savior,
His Name Is Jesus
I’m Living in His Love.
Why I’m not giving up
this isn’t my first life
this time I’m doing it right
so I can humbly come out on top.
Why I’m not giving up
I have before,
look where it got me,
A jail sentence,
A kick in the butt.
Why I’m not giving up
my past has strengthened me
I have new opportunities
I have a half full cup.
Why I’m not giving up
I have what’s best
Better than all the rest
My Heavenly Father from above.
Why I’m not giving up
If You Would Only Listen
by Anonymous (Northwest Correctional, Swanton, VT)
If you would only listen—
you might hear a heartbeat.
Maybe yours, mine, the world’s
isn’t that neat?
I you would only listen-
you could hear their cry
“Who’s” you ask
Not yours at least
but if it was—would that be fine
If you would only listen—
I know you could learn.
Wisdom, understanding,
compassion, empathic concern.
If you would only listen—
You could hear God speak
Know Your Purpose
that you’re not worthless
and that He wants to give you peace.
When I Was a Kid
by Anonymous (Northwest Correctional, Swanton, VT)
When I was a kid
I was innocent
I didn’t know right from wrong
Like Adam and Eve
Before sin was born
Making people sing sad songs
When I was a kid
I was hurt every way possible
Don’t be sad, It made me strong
To carry a Love to all
Showing them they can grow
that nothing is impossible
If You Would Only Listen
by Anonymous (Northwest Correctional, Swanton, VT)
If you would only listen you might
hear a voice in the deep
If you would only listen you might hear
me searching for my keep
If you would only listen you might
find me crying alone
If you would only listen you’d fall in
line, one of their drones
If you would only listen you might
understand my heart
If you would only listen you’ll find
the moment at which this did start
If you would only listen you might find
me in my mask
If you would only listen I might stop
looking into the past
If you would only listen you will
understand my quick descent
If you would only listen you might
be able to prevent
If you would only listen I might not
have become myself
If you would only listen you’ll see
me in my hell
When I Get Tired..!
by Anonymous (Northwest Correctional, Swanton, VT)
When I get tired I wonder will I stop
When I get tired it’s when I pop
When I get tired I make bad choices
When I get tired is when I hear all the voices
When I get tired I might bend a knee
When I get tired I no longer am me
When I get tired I lose all control
When I get tired I think of what’s above and below
When I get tired will I stop and listen
When I get tired is when the snake does his hissing
When I get tired you might not like who you see
When I get tired I don’t even recognize me
When I get tired is when I let the evil flow
When I get tired I lose all control
When I get tired of this life will it end
When I get tired will I put down this pen
When I get tired I’m no longer this innocent child
When I get tired I finally rest after all these miles
When I get tired they will lower me into the icy cold ground
When I get tired I no longer be lost but finally found
When I get tired buried below all the sod
When I get tired I’ll finally be before my God
What Really Matters
by Anonymous (Northwest Correctional, Swanton, VT)
To come to America and start a new life with a different view and try to rebuilt your future
What really matters is to get married and find out the person was not the one who you are thinking to building a life with!
What really matters is to try to be a better person if the society treats you different and always makes things hard!
What really matter is now I don’t just feel love for people but for myself.
What really matter is if I die and don’t find peace and love inside me.
When I Was a Kid
by Anonymous (Northwest Correctional, Swanton, VT)
When I was kid always thinking that this
is just something easy when I was kid I
jump to place to place and smile to see what brings so much good to myself and
when I was a kid I never thought that I could grow up and try to be a man and
when I was a kid I smelled flowers in my morning
and brought happiness to other people and
when I was a kid, I never had to change my mind because I was perfect and feeling strong.
When I was a kid judgement was not this
I was always considering only forgiveness, was what I always said
Listen
by Anonymous (Northwest Correctional, Swanton, VT)
Listen about what I have to say and listen to my voice and if you listen you can feel my pain and if you listen you can see things hurt my future. If you listen you can touch my heart and help me to understand. And if you listen you can know where I am come from. And if you listen you will maybe stop trying to change me and try to move with me and find a way to bring me to the light.
I Am From
by Anonymous (Northwest Correctional, Swanton, VT)
I am from Brooklyn where you
have to make a name for yourself in order
to be seen.
I am from a small hood made
up from only four blocks.
I am from where they rap about
the shit that really goes on in the streets.
I am from where you gotta make
it happen on your own, to get what
you want. I am from where
people die before they even become
an adult. I am from where the
police are here to fuck with
you rather than protect you.
Poetic Blue
by Anonymous (Northwest Correctional, Swanton, VT)
Poetic Blue inside her fine lines
Lie the quality of a strong mind
Poetic Blue, Defines a Queen, with goddess-like signs,
An hour glass figure that’s sweeter than a blueberry vine.
Poetic Blue, Within lies a justice, and divine equity.
Built for the future scales.
Poetic Blue. Wisdom becomes hers through
Faith in what she cannot see.
Poetic Blue Justice is Blue and Dripping Hatred So poetically.
Poetic find me sad, fined me happy, find me flowing,
Like a river
Splashing and crushing, twisting and turning toward
The End without Warning
But loved for Creating themes of
Love, Truth, Lips that puff and Hands that Mold. A heart
To a heart, a soul with a Soul.
Poetic old poetic mold. Poetic Wood
Poetic told poetic eyes, Poetic Times
Last Kiss of poetic Words, forever, and
Ever Missed, Poetic Yours
Some Advice From Someone Who Knows
by Anonymous (Northwest Correctional, Swanton, VT)
You never know how things can get
until you end up somewhere you never
expected to be, but always hoped to
reach, and that’s when you receive some
advice from someone who knows.
Things can get real bad if you
don’t take some advice from someone
who knows.
Yet you never know until you’re the
one that’s giving advice
as the person who knows.
Why I’m Not Giving Up
by Anonymous (Northwest Correctional, Swanton, VT)
I have lots of people that look up
to me that’s why I’m not giving up
My sibling and my loved
ones would be crushed by the thought
of me giving up.
I won’t give up
because I know what it’s like
when you achieve what you want when
you push through it
I been through so much just to
get here so why would I give
up.
I always been the strongest
that’s why I’m not giving up.
If You Would Only Listen
by Anonymous (Northwest Correctional, Swanton, VT)
If you would only listen you
would get what I feel inside
If you would only listen you’d
know that you’re the one in which
I confide
If you would only listen you could
tell I truly want you to be mine
If you would only listen without
you I’m running blind
If you would only listen ask me
questions give your opinions just take
the time
If you would only listen the
truth is you’re coming home then
I’d be fine.
When I Was a Kid
by Anonymous (Northwest Correctional, Swanton, VT)
When I was a kid everything was great, mom always had piles of good yummy food on my plate. Visiting grandparents, playing sports, not a care in the world except to throw a ball with my dad in our yard or learn to wrench on my bike with Dad’s tools and show the other neighborhood kids. I was great at fishing and swimming, traveling was fun. Now I’m old and in trouble not so much fun. I wish I could go back to sleepovers and board games and Christmas with my sister, mom and Dad, sliding in the snow. Where my life will end up no one will know.
Penny candy and spending time with my family.
I Am From
by Anonymous (Northwest Correctional, Swanton, VT)
I am from Congo Demoncraticque and
I am from two different families who bring
me to this world with no Love and cry fierce
I am from this big place call Kinshasa where
every people have a right to get to live and find a
way to a better life. No matter what is so difficult,
they try every way they can to reach their
dream. But they always have in mind
that one day the future is going to be offered to them.
I am from this beautiful woman who fought
to get her free life. That was difficult
because she had to decide to live for her
kids and go to prepare a life for them.
So I am from strong people and love.
I WASN'T SURE..?
by Anonymous (Northwest Correctional, Swanton, VT)
I wasn't sure how to be a man
I wasn't sure the tracks in the sand
I wasn't sure if you were real
I wasn't sure if you would listen
I wasn’t sure of the reflecting glisten
I wasn't sure if I was up or down
I wasn't sure if I were the king or the clown
I wasn’t sure why inside felt like an endless pit
I wasn't sure if I truly fit
I wasn’t sure in the beginning
I wasn't sure if I had finished sinning
Wasn’t sure if I should fall
I wasn’t sure if anyone heard my call
I wasn’t sure when my feelings shifted like tectonic plates
I wasn’t sure what it meant these metaphorical internal earthquake
I wasn’t sure how to be okay
I wasn’t sure if I wanted to wake each and every day
I wasn’t sure if you were me or I was you
I wasn’t sure if eternity was true
I wasn’t sure how to push reset
I wasn’t sure if we’d even ever met
I wasn’t sure if I even wanted to do this
I wasn’t sure although I really do wish
I wasn’t sure WHY I WAS
I wasn’t sure SO JUST BECAUSE
“Heavy is the Head That Wears the Crown” copyright Sedricka Morris
I'm the one who took a stand & said no!
The one who changed the narrative & let the past go.
Seeing through blurry lies within the veil.
The truth is hard to accept, but the truth I shall tell.
I'm the one who left & broke away.
The one who saw the generation curse & didn't let it stay
Eager to improve & be a better me.
So when it's my turn I'll raise a healthy family.
I'm the one, not the two or the three, to do what
My ancestors need & want for me.
I took a look at myself. My mother had embarrassingly shouted “I am so proud of you, have a great day at school, Nellie.” As if it weren’t enough for a grown woman to have to get dropped off?
Sidling up behind me was my former boss, the one from the place I had just left. The one with all the complicated feelings attached.
“Nel?”
How awkward every moment is when you are not introspective. Hornets to hornet.
“Oh, I heard that in HR that you were…”
“You heard how I talked you up, I hope?”
Or sometimes you are introspective, or at least trying. And the efforting becomes a yoga breathing exercise where you are not sure if you can breathe…I had a director whom I hated in college with her decaf-half-calf-nutmeg-sprinkled soy lattes and back massages; I know now that she’s who I talk like now, and that I would have be delighted to know her now if she were part of my current sangha. She would make us do some hippy-dippy breath work, and I would excuse myself to go out for a smoke.
I just got a message that in this interim job, I have a pay cut, and I got a message that a dress I like is on sale for less than 4 dollars. I have been buying so many clothes trying to reconstruct my life, that I cannot even get a sense of what I am doing.
I want to work where I am needed. I need to be values-based, fall in love with my experience, every move needs to be one from a deeper, higher part of me. I have always been the eager puppy on staff.
I did not realize how much money I made last year.
I spent it all on worry. I spent it on economic insecurity.
I took a look at myself when my friend fell on the step, so many people rushed to help her. Grabbed her book, wallet, eyeglass case… handed them to me. When a young man asked if he could help her, she turned to him fully, and said, ‘yes’. She’s the kind of woman who in asking for help, knows how to pull up her pants— proverbially, and literally.
"It's how we deal with aging," she quipped.
Over the ensuing coffee, she helped me with these conversation threads and sewed them together in a beautiful recovery sweater,
whom to trust: (me)
how not to spend money,
how to find self-worth,
(punctuating some of the stories with a well tied knot of, "that's ridiculous!" "You were doing the best you could." "No one could have done what you were asked to do in the circumstances you were doing that." "That reminds me of..." "and I think about that person, trying to hang on, and it kept me doing service for that meeting maybe a little longer than I should." "There's no way we will ever get a topic about 'gut transplants & fecal matter' ever again... we had something special, and now, it's just another meeting.")
how to get out without escaping.
Even when there's this new look at myself, I may still keep looking.
I took a look at myself.
I didn’t like what I saw.
Once again, my inner critic crucified me.
You’re too fat.
You’re too old.
You’re ugly.
This floored me.
I’m none of those things.
My inner critic held firm.
'Fuck you’, I screamed.
You’ve been harassing me for 56 years.
At 62, I deserve to accept my body, my wrinkles, myself.
I’ve never done this.
Has any woman ever done this?
Accept themselves?
We’ve been advertised to ad nauseam.
Eat this. Don’t eat that.
Drink this. Don’t drink that.
Exercise, exercise, exercise.
Wear this. Don’t wear that.
There was a time when I curled up in front of the boob tube watching ‘What Not to Wear.’
For years, I took advice from a man and a woman who tore through people’s closets tossing their clothes out and dressing them anew.
I bought into it.
The clothes were not even my style.
I’ve bought into everyone’s ideas about what is right.
What is attractive.
No more.
I took a look at myself again.
Crows feet and all.
Silver hair.
I looked myself in the eye in the mirror.
I said to myself, ‘I love you Jackie…
I love you just the way you are.’
‘Reclaiming Our Stories” was a live Zoom featuring written work from inmates at Marble Valley Regional Correctional Facility read by three professional actors and other invited guests. If you missed the original performance, you can watch it by clicking the image above. “Reclaiming Our Stories” was led by WFR Workshop leader Carol Adinolfi, and was a collaboration among Writers for Recovery, Threshold Collaborative, and the Vermont Department of Corrections. We want to thank Carol for her the inspiration and for shepherding the process, the writers for generously sharing their wonderful work, the readers for treating this work with the respect it deserves, and the DOC for giving us permission to bring this project to the public. Special thanks goes to John Lugar, who donated time to edit the video and make it look fantastic, despite some Zoom glitches that you may notice, but that he was in no way responsible for. Please enjoy this amazing work, and share it if you can. The voices of the men of Marble Valley are voices that need to be heard.
I am from being their pride; to being their disgrace
I am from a small family made large
I am from intellect and hard work
I am from a class of over 100 to less than 20 alive
I am from a place you'll miss if you blink
I am from my FATHER not in BLOOD although in LOVE
I am from a place I slowly forget
I am from a voice I no longer remember a face I no longer recognize
I am from my Family Clan and I proudly HOLD
I am from being found to being lost
Before me lay a map though a key washed away
Through armor built thicker each and every day
I am from a burning desire and unquenchable FIRE
Flames that RISE flames which DEVOUR
I am ME; I am no longer FREE I am locked tightly behind Rose of concrete
Athough NONE the less I am FREE
Done means finished, over, basta, no way
to do it right, no way to do it wrong
it’s done whether a lose or won:
jobs slashed by the billionaire class
Relief ripped from the needy, home and abroad
social security on the block
the Art of the Deal and its malevolent cock,
grinningly Replaced freedoms with repressions
buried Rosevelt at last
his policies crammed into the rubbish
traded for cash in the banks of the wealthy
what a bitch to reconcile
Recovery may be long and hard
Project 2025 come fully alive
Can we Reform the powers in their demonic towers?
Push ‘em back, give ‘em the sack?
What I got done.that day was, in retrospect, surprising to me, impressed me. A day of "exposure therapy," she called it. Walking into the church of my childhood and responding fully to the parishioners who were fans of my younger self. Bringing my body to the lake and subjecting my feet to its wrath. Approaching the house, seeing my old friend's car in the driveway, and unwaveringly facing her in the garage. Entering my old place of employment for the first time since leaving it. All made possible by asking for the right thoughts and actions, it seems.
Empathy has morphed
into a dirty word, these days
considered too woke
by the new techno Right
vilified by the president’s henchman
empathy is now eschewed
as weak and feminine
incompatible with strong and virile
incompatible with rich and ruthless
empathy might rob their cupboards
of hoarded wealth, they fear
oh dear, have I offended
by my critique? quick,
into the closet of my thoughts
before they root me out
and stuff me away as gay
or any other pretext
to vex and protest
responsible action
I warmed the milk but to what temperature I wasn’t sure. I didn’t have a thermometer. The recipe called for it to be 110 but my finger wouldn’t read anything. So I went on with my recipe as if all was as it should be, leaning on my knowledge of cooking to carry me through to the successful final rise of my loaf of bread. I recently ran across a quirky saying-Knowledge is knowing a tomato is a fruit, Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad. I wasn’t sure. When we signed the papers for our house over to the young family of Bakers (no pun intended-that’s really their name) I wasn’t sure how I would feel when we handed them the keys. The thermometer read -6 degrees, my finger read SOUTH. Then, I was sure.
I got the message loud and clear.
Go to rehab or you’re fired.
That was twenty four years ago.
March 2001.
I stayed sober for exactly one month.
Kicking and screaming, I dove back down the rabbit hole.
Just a little weed.
Just a little alcohol.
Off to the races of 24/7 inebriation.
Until I got it.
I have alcoholism.
Bodily and mentally different.
Can’t metabolize it.
A mind consumed with controlling it.
A body allergic to it.
The second recovery began 7/17/2001 and lasted for well over a decade.
Then my drug of choice became pills.
Pills for pain.
Pills for anxiety.
Pills for depression.
Pills to sleep.
Then I started stealing my husband’s opioids.
Soon I was nodding off at my desk.
Nodding off in my living room.
Then the magic elixir.
Weed to to titrate off the pills.
Weed mixed with nicotine worked.
Until it didn’t.
Don’t let anyone tell you weed isn’t addictive.
I’m on my second, or is it my third weed recovery.
The night sweats.
The nightmares.
The erratic emotions.
The rage.
Today is 90 days.
Again.
Feels good to be free.
To be honest.
To really embrace being me.