Archive for the loneliness Category

good fortune cookie cutter ship yard stick shift

Posted in appearances, loneliness with tags on June 11, 2008 by lolastone

The track homes have been held off for now. They are a third through and now sunken plots framed by gravel drives make up the dotted line. They are gray, they are identical. The dark windows straddle an angled entry that appears to me an ominous sneer. A green mountain stops abruptly beyond the field. A perfect orb, an exhausted turtle who’s collapsed at their pier blocks. A bald stripe tears across it’s entire middle. A disturbed patient, dumped in his robe in a mountainous back-alley.

The mosquitoes are dive-bombers. They are the size of small wasps, but their bodies are so thin, like strands of taut silk inspired to sting. They go for the ribs. They are big enough to snatch out of the air. To carry a wiffle bat and pock its surface with bloody splotches and crinkled wax paper wings.

Little Girl Giant

Posted in beautiful people, loneliness, loss for words with tags , on January 25, 2008 by lolastone

We never know…

Posted in beautiful people, loneliness, loss for words, romance, vision with tags , , , on January 21, 2008 by lolastone

Morning EditionJanuary 18, 2008 · Anna and Joseph Wise, childhood sweethearts, were married for 57 years. They met when she was 8 and he was 11.

“I was madly in love with him and I thought surely that I would marry him when I was old enough,” she says.

How did she persuade him?

“Well, I was sassy,” she says. “I turned on all the tricks that I knew, and winked an eye or two now and then.”

On their first date, Joseph Wise took Anna to a baseball game.

“I was perfectly willing to go there or anywhere else,” she says.

On their dates, they “danced the night away,” she says. “We went to speakeasies. We did all things you’re not supposed to do.”

In 1933, the couple “just sort of agreed it was time to get married,” she says.

After nearly six decades of marriage, Joseph Wise lost a leg to diabetes, then died due to complications from the disease in 1991.

“We never know what diseases are going to catch up with us,” Anna Wise says. “It’s amazing the things that people can live through when they have to. So you get through it.

“And you get through almost anything and you live to be 96. And sometimes you wonder why. But then … you look up at the blue sky and think it’s going to be alright.”

 

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