BEFORE ALL OUR LIVES BEGAN TO CHANGE
Before all our lives began to change
time was stretched between holidays like
carnavale lights and summer lasted forever
every year until Labor Day mysteriously
arrived again to change living to another circle
It seemed we played all the time — hair cuts on
darby horses and watermelon seed fights, building
castles of sand and jelly fish oozing against the
jetties, discovering the nest holes of horseshoe
crabs below the high tide line, and snow forts drifted
three stories every January and February, sledding
hellions down Cooperstown Road, the cold and snowflakes
cutting younger cheeks, with the excruciating pleasure
to do it, again Playing “I have a little umbrella,”
dragging the chair covers across the sand like dragon tails
or lizards or princesses Shrieking to begin hide-and-seek,
crouched under the crocheted orange and blue and brown
comforter — dying to be found and hoping that we would
never be discovered, because that discovery always
ended in a serious session of being tickled until we
could not breathe
But, then, living changed us into other circles,
other places, other people.
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Dedicated ~ In Love and Memory to: Barbara Dunn Blossom, Genevieve Dunn, Helen Smith Dunn, Mahlon H. Dunn, Jr., Tacy Dunn SanAntonio
(c) 1997 Jessan Dunn (DeCredico) Otis ~ RHODE ISLAND WOMEN SPEAK: An Anthology of Authors and Artists, The Rhode Island Committee, The National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA), Ed. Rosemary W. Prisco, p.19.
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