The Innisfree Poetry Journal
www.innisfreepoetry.org
by Ellen Aronofsky Cole
TO WAYNE, DIAGNOSED WITH SCHIZOPHRENIA IN 1973
People said we looked alike when we were children. Most days you were my favorite. We rode bikes to nowhere, picnicked in the traffic island, scooped tadpoles out of Miller's pond until you were banished for falling in. That was before your luck dried up, leaving you raw and cracked as a chapped hand.
Sitting with you here I see our faces bear witness against us, yours a road map to strange countries, mine grooved from nose to mouth, eyes grown dreamy. Still, we're not so different, are we? you listening to your voices, me straining for a whisper from the muse.
We fish the same pool, after all, you and I. You tread water, now submerged, now bobbing up for air; I dip a finger, then a foot, then tiptoe in, prepared to flee if I should tumble into that deep place of yours where metaphor bubbles into madness.
Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication
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