Karen has a room on York,
a far cry from the mansion she lost on Winter.
Maybe it isn't far.
Three miles, give or take,
seen differently by car, bus, or foot.
It's far enough she can't walk over to look at it any more.
Truth be told,
it wasn't ever a mansion
except in Karen's heart.
It was an investment
to the man who scarfed it for a song at auction
and remains a source of irritation
to the renters who pay a small fortune for it now,
getting little in return for their money.
It was a cry, for sure.
That part was true and never changes.
Karen was someone's little girl. Had to be.
Mothers can't run out before the baby is born,
so she belonged to someone for a few minutes
no matter what happened later.
Like all little girls,
she came into the world with innocent eyes
and a spontaneous smile.
Maybe the investor got what was left of those at auction too.
With or without joy,
Karen was someone's pride at some point.
Someone clapped when she took her first run across the room,
and noticed when she strung her vocabulary into a full sentence.
Surely, Miss Gray patted herself on the back
for implanting the multiplication tables in Karen's hard head,
and Johnny Rogers puffed his chest
over distracting her from them.
Ah, yes, Karen was someone's crush.
She attracted plenty of attention
from the football player who shared her table in biology class,
and the big eared boy on the bus.
And there was that driver at the moving company
where she answered phones after graduation,
who couldn't keep his eyes off her.
She might even be someone's unforgettable first love.
She thinks she was someone's wife in the seventies
He might have died,
or wanted her dead
and he might still dream about her smile.
Speaking of smiles,
she smiled a lot on Winter,
when she was someone's neighbor.
She waved from her chair on the porch,
took soup over when anyone was sick,
shoveled Mr. Turner's steps,
and made a quilt for every baby born on the street.
She didn't get to smile the day she left.
Her friends weren't out there
when she sorted through her things at the curb
to gather what she could carry,
but she would smile the next time she saw them.
She walked back to Winter as long as she could,
because babies aren't born on York
and there aren't any porches.
She would walk back to Winter to look for smiles,
if she could still walk
She smiled a lot when she still had teeth,
and others smiled back.
She had teeth when she still had insurance.
Teeth and glasses, and allergy medicine
so her eyes and nose weren't so runny, and red.
Maybe she's glad she doesn't have glasses on York,
so she doesn't know when people don't smile back.
She had insurance when she still had a job.
She was somebody's valued employee for thirty years
and has a pin to prove it.
Well, she had the pin
until she lost it on the curb on Winter,
but sometimes she still has memories of the job she loved.
She had a job when she still had her health,
or at least when she still had the strength
to pretend she had her health.
She was someone's inspiration
when she ignored her pain
and continued to work
for her insurance and smile.
The doctor got that
long before the investor came along.
She was someone's friend
when she still had health and a job
and teeth and a smile.
She was everyone's friend.
She loved.
She cared.
She was someone's savior,
everyone's champion,
a crusader of causes.
She is someone's cause now.
She is someone else's sin.


Comments: 54
"Truth be told,
it wasn't ever a mansion
except in Karen's heart."
--and this--
"Ah, yes, Karen was someone's crush."'
Beautiful.
She is someone's cause now.
She is someone else's sin.
.... heartfelt!
You have directed our attention to humanity, discarded, by us.
With words that linger thick with guilt in our consciousness
With a lament for one lone woman, now old and forgotten
Is this partly biographical?
This poem was simply amazing. It brought tears to my eyes. The description was so beautiful and straightforward. I don't think I have the right words to describe how much this touched me. I'm printing it out to save it so I will always be able to go back and read it.
She was somebody's valued employee for thirty years
and has a pin to prove it.
What a biting commentary and so true. Great job on this.
I loved this poem. It is quality work, with a quality message, and I don't care if you get 20 comments or 800.
I confess to posting lots of responses on my article today, but only because I checked in several times at work, and I did not want any commenter to feel ignored. It was an emotional piece, and the comments touched me.
Keep doing what you do, girl. It's terrific!
Thank you Sandy, thank you for writing about what so many people need to hear. You remain, forever, my friend and my mentor.
This was a beautiful poem Sandy…Thank you.
I was speaking with a woman just this weekend about Europe. She's from Austria, and is appalled at how we allow people to live over here. Long story...maybe I'll write something on it.
Thanks, Sandy, for continuing to bring people's attention to the important issue of our disposable society.
Great point, Dennis, about the need to rewrite the rules. We're going backwards with all the cuts to social programs that once protected people.
John, thanks for pointing out those lines. I still get a chill when I read them, and actually picture the face of a street person I used to see in front of the drug store. I could still see traces of a beautiful woman in her face, and wondered if there was someone, somewhere, still remembering good times with her.
everyone is someone..reminds me of the song, was it dean martin, "you're nobody till somebody loves you "
Oh, wow...I almost let this one slip by but glad I did not. I went with my husband one day to visit his grandmother. She lived in a nursing home and really was doing quite well. His mother visited her most every day...anyway, I will get to the story. Sitting about three or four rockers down was an elderly lady. It must have been her daughter that was sitting with her. The daughter and her were talking quietly but soon the conversation became loud. The lady said, 'I want some fried chicken! Why can't I have my fried chicken?' The daughter replied, 'The doctor said it was not good for you. You just cannot have it mother, I am sorry.' 'But my tast buds are the only thing that is left!' Most people might have found this humorous coming from someone who appeared to be at least 100 years old. My first thought was, 'Go get her the chicken!'
'Let her have some fried chicken!' When did doctors become God almightly? I felt so sorry for her...a life time of frying chicken for her loved ones I'm sure and she cannot have any! Rediculous. and shame on the daughter, too. Far too many times we close our ears and do not hear what the heart says. Don't you agree?