broken beer bottles

    her front sidewalk is littered with
    broken beer bottles
    inside, a four and a two year old
    run around on unfinished wood flooring
    bare foot, still in pajamas;
    I’m asked to teach her safety.
    one toddler climbs up and down the counter top
    making toast and cheese whiz
    cranks the tv
    barney sings his purple tunes,
    his brother yips for cherrios
    as mom and I
    try to sit at the table;
    I’m asked to teach her behavior skills.
    she is on her way to physio-therapy,
    a year ago her then boyfriend
    pronounced her a slut
    and veered his car
    into the path of an oncoming train.
    I have bad taste in men, she laughs,
    shows me her new $7,000 smile;
    I’m asked to teach her self esteem.
    I go home, make a tuna sandwich
    and take my dog for a walk.
    it’s ok to be single, I remind myself,
    relate to her in the ways that I do
    and pay what bills I can.


    footsteps

    cheekbones beamed, creaked with age
    mom was proud of her little girl
    all that nature blessed her with

    adolescence blossomed
    with just the right curvature
    vivacious personality to match

    one too many comments
    that she had what it takes
    to follow her mother’s footsteps
    become a dancer

    one too many hand prints
    left on her butt from uncle,

    and she was soon dressing in
    baggy clothes, sloppy sweats.

    anything to deter true beauty
    nagging family members

    imposing
    that she carry on tradition
    become a dancing stripper

    the very last thing she aspired to be

    she hinges back on the heel of her chair
    cola in hand, suckling on a huge
    ripe strawberry

    so what did you become?
    we ask her, intensely

    what else,
    she bows her head
    peeks through strands of raw, bleach stricken hair

    a dancer.


Donna Hill
     Donna Hill lives in British Columbia, Canada with her three sons. She has been seriously writing poetry for a few years now, drawing much of her writing style for realism from life around her, her family, and her work as a child educator. She currently is poetry editor of Erosha, a literary journal of the erotic. Donna's poems have appeared in print issues of One Dog Press, Sex in Public, Poems Niederngrasse and Peshekee River and have also been published online by numerous literary webzines. Her poem, "my hands write when I need them to," took first prize in Comrades first annual poetry contest, while "the moon is a sliver tonight" placed seventh. Both poems are slated to appear in Comrades upcoming anthology, 2001.
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