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Diana's Writing

~ These are the writings of Diana Lubarsky

Diana's Writing

Tag Archives: growing up

My Father’s Store

17 Friday Oct 2014

Posted by DK Lubarsky in Poems

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

anger, children, family, father, growing up, memoir, poem

Brooklyn 1957

Wind and snow dance on concrete streets,
Slicing through city canyons of pre-war brick,
Tattooed with casement windows and iron laced fire escapes
This day, like all the others, shortened by winter’s darkness

My father’s hardware store smells like the kerosene
He keeps in the back room
I cut kitchen shades to measure with confidence born of youth,
And likewise keys proportioned to locks

I am too young to carry 12 foot rolls of linoleum
The way father does, on his back, up six flights of stairs
But I help out each Saturday in the weeks before Christmas,
Selling white china cups and bright red Christmas tree stands

The smell of kerosene, and the taste of piping hot bagels
Still brings me back to those days
Munching hot bagels on the ride home,
In the days before the anger.

DKL 9/30/14

Joshua

26 Tuesday Aug 2014

Posted by DK Lubarsky in Ramblings

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Tags

army, children, growing up, memories, sons

It was 1992. As a self-described plain person, I felt overwhelmed at the opulence of the hotel; plush carpets, huge 200 year old portraits hung on walls, white columns, gilded ivy. We waited quietly in line. Whispers seemed the appropriate demeanor. Our turn to enter the restaurant came soon enough and my husband and I were seated by a waif-like young woman with kind eyes and a bright smile.
Two hundred and forty six small lights circled the north and south walls, we were told. And the mahogany panels on the east side were first placed in 1856. A wall of window, floor to ceiling, was on the west. Classical music filled the air, created by a middle aged musician seated at a grand piano in the center of the enormous room.
We waited for about 15 minutes for our son to join us, and then he walked in. Tall, straight, handsome as only an 18 year old young man could be. Neatly pressed in gray, shoes shining, brass buttons gleaming. A very small smile crawled across his lips when he spotted us and walked our way. It was the first time we had seen him in uniform.
I remember that day, breakfast in the grand ballroom of the Thayer Hotel at West Point. I would always marvel at the incongruity of the opulence, the gold and alabaster columns, the classical music gently soothing, while in the bright sunshine on the other side of arched windows helicopters rose and landed and tanks rolled across the bright green grass of the plain.
I looked at my son’s face, bright and eager, and wondered what the next few years would be like in his new world.

Ghosts

09 Monday Sep 2013

Posted by DK Lubarsky in Poems

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Tags

fears, growing up, inner thoughts, memories, poem

Twenty feet from the top
I turned and walked away
My mind seeing images
These eyes would not behold

Familiar ghosts snag my ankles
Impeding ascending trails
I crumble to the ground
And commune with tender earth instead

The pulse of life through decades pass
And windows frost and vision dims
I wonder if my ghosts, now friends
Will ever depart that I might see the mountain’s crest

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