Monday, November 28, 2022

Like the Rain

 



I never liked the rain until I walked through it with youEvery thunder cloud that came was one more I might not get throughOn the darkest day there's always light and now I see it tooBut I never liked the rain until I walked through it with you
I hear it falling in the night and filling up my mindAll the heaven's rivers come to light I see it all unwindI hear it talking through the trees and on the window paneWhen I hear it I just can't believe I never liked the rain
Like the rain, I have fallen for you and I know just why youLike the rain, always calling for you, I'm falling for you nowJust like the rain
When the cloud is rolling over, thunder striking meIt's as bright as lightning and I wonder why I couldn't seeThat it's always good and when the flood is gone we still remainGuess I've known all along I just belong here with you falling
Like the rain, I have fallen for you and I know just why youLike the rain, always calling for you, I'm falling for you nowJust like the rain, I have fallen for youI'm falling for you now just like the rain
And when the night falls on our better daysAnd we're looking to the skyFor the winds to take us high above the plainsI know that we'll find better ways to look into the eyeOf the storms that will be callingForever we'll be falling
Like the rain, I have fallen for you, and I know just why youLike the rain, always calling for you, I'm falling for you now justLike the rain, I have fallen for you, and I know just why youLike the rain, always calling for you, I'm falling for you now justLike the rainLike the rainLike the rainLike the rainLike the rainLike the rainLike the rain

Sunday, November 20, 2022

Run

 



I'll sing it one last time for youThen we really have to goYou've been the only thing that's rightIn all I've done
And I can barely look at youBut every single time I doI know we'll make it anywhereAway from here
Light up, light upAs if you have a choiceEven if you cannot hear my voiceI'll be right beside you dear
Louder, louderAnd we'll run for our livesI can hardly speak I understandWhy you can't raise your voice to say
To think I might not see those eyesMakes it so hard not to cryAnd as we say our long goodbyesI nearly do
Light up, light upAs if you have a choiceEven if you cannot hear my voiceI'll be right beside you, dear
Louder, louderAnd we'll run for our livesI can hardly speak I understandWhy you can't raise your voice to say?
Slower, slowerWe don't have time for thatAll I want is to find an easier wayTo get out of our little heads
Have heart, my dearWe're bound to be afraidEven if it's just for a few daysMaking up for all this mess
Light up, light upAs if you have a choiceEven if you cannot hear my voiceI'll be right beside you dear

Middle Fingers

 

Wednesday, November 16, 2022

Love You by Sean Dietrich

 She sits there behind the cash register. Every day. Reading “Better Homes & Gardens” magazines. Sometimes she reads “Real Simple” or “People.” She rings up customers in the modest, side-of-the-road Alabama café. I am one such customer.

Her husband recently died. He was 74. It was sudden. He had just retired. They were going to travel. See America. Live out their golden years in a 28-foot RV. Have fun. Now he’s gone. Now she works here as a cook. She sold the RV.

“You lose your husband, and you lose your place in the world.”

Warren. That was her husband’s name. There is loneliness in her voice when she speaks of him. Half of her heart lies six-feet below the soil, she tells me.

“I met Warren when I’s fourteen,” she said. “He was fifteen. My daddy made us wait two years to marry. Warren said he would’ve waited until Jesus came back if he had to. I thought he was so romantic. God, I miss him.”

The place does a nice little lunch business. It’s rural food. The kind of fare the American Heart Association wants to ban.

Our mothers ruin us early in this part of the world. They feed us smother-fried steaks, biscuits the size of regulation softballs, sausage gravy for breakfast, battered poultry, and casseroles which primarily consist of cheese topped with more cheese, garnished with cheese.

And we eat lots of vegetables, too. Only, our vegetables are cooked with bacon grease from a Maxwell House can which sits on the stove. Every family has a can like this. The suet inside the can has been accumulating since Nixon was in office.

My grandmother raised my uncles during World War II on a steady diet of bacon grease until they developed 42-inch waistlines. Granny would force my uncles to clean their plates. During each meal she would say, “Remember boys, every time you leave food on your plate, you’re feeding Hitler.”
So my uncles tried to starve the German army.

This older woman is someone’s granny. We are mid-conversation when the woman’s grandchildren burst from the kitchen. Two girls. Both blond. She showers them with hugs while she is ringing me up.
She asks how my food was.

“It was superb,” I say.

“Glad to hear it. Come back tomorrow, and we’ll have zipper peas.”

Believe me, I would. In fact, I would crawl across a sea of broken glass to eat zipper peas. But alas, I am on my way to Kentucky. I have a lot of highway I need to put behind me.

I place my money on the counter. The woman looks at the cash with a smirk. “Not many people pay cash anymore,” she says. “Even our older folks use cards now.”

She uses this opportunity to teach her granddaughters a math lesson. She looks at one of the girls and says, “You want to count his change?”

The girl is maybe 8 years old. The kid mashes buttons. She takes my money. She painstakingly makes change. She is one dollar and two dimes short, but who’s counting?

“I’m a different person since I lost my husband,” the woman goes on.

I ask how she means.

“For one thing,” she says, “I’ve started telling people ‘I love you’ more. I say it all the time now.
“Because you never know when you’re gonna see a person again. We could die today. You never know if this will be the last time.

“So I tell everyone ‘I love you.’ Even people not in my family, sometimes I just say, ‘Hey, I love you,’ because you never know. Someone might need to hear it.”

I ask the obvious. “Do I get an ‘I love you’?” I say.

The woman gives a wry grin. We’re strangers, but in a way, there is no such thing as strangers.
“Sure,” she says. “Why not? I love you, honey.”

“I love you, too,” I say.

Then we hug. Two complete strangers, hugging in an American café. She smells exactly like a woman I used to know.

I release her. I walk out the door. And I’m back on the highway in a matter of seconds.

She’s doing okay, Warren. I just thought you’d want to know that.

Sunday, November 13, 2022

I Hope You're Happy Now

 



t's all on me, it's my mistakeI said "I don't love you" a little too lateBut I guess there ain't ever a right timeAnd I don't know why it's called a goodbye
Go run my name into the groundTell everyone you know just howHow I slammed the door on our foreverBut I promise you it's for the better
I hope you find what you were looking forI hope your heart ain't hurting anymoreAnd you get moving on, all figured outAnd you don't hate me somehow'Cause I hope you're happy now
Who knew this heart could break this hardOr a love like ours could fall apartWithout so much as a warning?I thought that I was what you wanted
Well, I guess you found what you were looking forI guess my heart ain't worth it anymoreI'm a wreck, I'm a messAnd I ain't got nothing leftAnd so I hope you're happy now
I hope you find what you were looking forI guess my heart ain't worth it anymoreHope you get moving on, all figured outAnd you don't hate me somehowI'm a wreck, I'm a messAnd I ain't got nothing leftSo I hope you're happy nowHappy nowOh, I hope you're happy now