Poem of the Week, by Mark Kraushaar

A friend of mine had a husband –lost to cancer now– who saw no reason to stint on the bubbly. Any occasion, he’d pop the cork and fill the flutes. My daughters and I were in the kitchen enjoying a glass of wine the other night, and I was telling them about this guy, and right away we decided to go out to dinner, because we could, so we should. Right? Then I decided that from here on out there’ll be a celebration every day. Go for a run, celebrate! Make a loaf of bread, celebrate! Teach a class, celebrate! Call a friend, celebrate! Wake up still alive? Hell yes.


What If the Hokey Pokey Really Is What It’s All About?

– Mark Kraushaar


You put your right foot in,

            You put your right foot out … ,

            That’s what it’s all about.


            —The Hokey Pokey, Larry LaPrise, 1948


Of an evening filled with wide-set

bright stars I think of my friends, Ray, Sara,

Father Hay, and Phil and Joe.

I think of them together and I think of them alone:

Friends, what better than to put your right foot in,

and what better than to take it out again?


What better than to leave your jacket

and your drink and join

the circled strangers on the floor?

What better than to put your left foot in

and then to take it out since

who’ll explain this strange life anyway,

the problems with love, the trouble with money?

It must be what is meant, this must be what’s intended.

What better than to leave your silent trying behind

and put your right foot in once more

then shake it all about?

What better than having said too little

or too much you join the farmer with his wife

and daughter, the couple with their

squeaky walkers, the FedEx man,

the florist and the LPN?

It must be what is meant,

this must be what it’s all about:

what better than to join the high-heeled,

high-haired waitress first pausing and laughing,

then leaning to her friend the grinning busboy

who, putting his elbow in then out again,

now shakes it all about.


 


For more information on Mark Kraushaar, please click here.


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Published on May 30, 2015 05:30
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