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Showing posts with label half-staff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label half-staff. Show all posts

Monday, April 19, 2021

WHEN I DIE IN THE NEXT MASS SHOOTING, HERE'S WHAT I LOOK FORWARD TO

by William McCarthy


"American Exceptionalism" by Nick Anderson.


“We never thought it would happen here,” my neighbor Sheila says.
Flags fly at half-staff; the governor holds me in his thoughts and prayers.
Another surge in the sale of assault weapons.
My senator reiterates that guns don’t kill people, people kill people.
 
My senator holds me in his thoughts and prayers.
More dollars promised to help the mentally ill.
Flags fly at half-staff; my governor reiterates that guns don’t kill people, people kill people.
Congress proposes another bill, weakens it, lets it die in committee.
 
Even more dollars promised to help the mentally ill.
On the six o’clock news, my children leave the church with my coffin.
Congress proposes another bill, weakens it, lets it die in committee.
The surgeons release my wife from the ICU.
 
On the six o’clock news, my children leave the church with my coffin.
Newspapers savor the irony: I survived a mass shooting a month ago, only to die in this one.
The surgeons release my wife from the ICU.
My thirteen-year-old daughter tells Anderson Cooper how much she will miss me.
 
Newspapers savor the irony: I survived a mass shooting a month ago, only to die in this one.
Another surge in the sale of assault weapons.
My governor’s wife holds my two-month-old son in her arms.
“We never thought it would happen here.”


Thirty years ago William McCarthy joined the Connecticut Writing Project and hasn’t recovered yet. “Since then," he writes, "I've tendered my drafts almost monthly in a writing group of other recovering CWP teachers. There’s a closeness among us we get nowhere else, as we share bits and pieces of our lives—our trials with truculent pianos, unpredictable children, and failing parents. Part is honing our craft, part is shaping our experiences, part is understanding who we are.”

Monday, August 05, 2019

BLEEDING OUT

by Lisa J. Rocklin




Let's just leave it down:
the flag—
half-staff.
Raise it high
on days when
no one dies
            like that. 

Declare a holiday. 

Thoughts 
make ineffective gauze.
Prayers 
absorb no blood.
Flags were not meant
to serve 
as tourniquets
or crucibles of
            patriotism.

Let's just kneel 
together
every time
our banner waves
for these days 
we share—
collecting grief like debt.
Let's mourn 
the self-destruction
            of a nation. 

Let there be rage for 
the addict we can't save
who shoots up 
skin that isn't his
triggered by . . . 
            it doesn't matter why.

As long as he's fed
as long as we're willing
to yield more dead
as long as we keep 
loading the chamber
let's just leave it down—
as a shroud—
star-spangled 
and red.


Lisa J. Rocklin is a writer, facilitator, community builder, and associate director of Women Writing for (a) Change, a nonprofit organization in Cincinnati, OH, that offers supportive writing circles to nurture and celebrate the individual voice.