POETRY CONTINUED: New Thanksgiving A break from work or school or anything is a vacuum of everything I already know: Holidays move farther away after the fact or closer still before, depending; a few minutes or an hour or a drink or two devoted to everything. The drive home is about 8 albums or so, a flatline through Ohio and Pennsylvania. If cameras still had great flashing bulbs I'd be up early the next day sweeping glass out the door hoping the cats didn't already hurt themselves - the new kitten I haven't seen yet. He was "traumatized" and Boo! is his name. It was/is supposed to be easy. It's a vacation, really. Bring the buds home to empty house for Thanksgivingbreak. The whole house I realize is much too large for the three of us to live in we just spread our sobriety thin over the hardwoods, the teeming ashtrays, the thawing turkey. They have as scattered parents as 1, so we all feast and smoke and drink and talk and sleep over at my place for the weekend. The coffee tables will never be the same I dream at night fretting, alongside an unfinished resume or a sleeping girl whichever haunts me least. But when you let one of your friends drive and you take the legless seat in the back with the car's only workingspeakers you know, you know you've never been this happy. Because happiness is soul music or a cigarette regardless if you and your friends are tense, still learning how to love each other. Regardless if you aren't happy, if you're ears are running with blood from hip hop or whatever's on next. Getting back to your other home is like stepping into an unfamiliar room in the house you grew up in. This time though there are electric pianos, beer cans and indoor pumpkins, roommates having sex, laughing and playingthe electric pianos and stomping on the floors. Attention: You are now 510 miles away from the 10 lb. turkey you bought completely frozen at 2 p.m. on Thanksgiving that you thawed by Saturday and decided you didn't want to deal with the guts so you left it whole for your mother. The woman at the register, the bagger and the shopper who called my friends and Ilout for beingcstoned shitheads were all together softly laughing at us, cracking easyjokes as we waited for the credit card to ring up, as I realized there is absolutely no difference between a resume and a frozen turkey. -ANDREWKLEIN,2007DAILYARTS EDITOR Wednsda, M rch12,008 - e ichgnDil . l P06 Pet's notebook Business-clad and blistered Business-clad and blistered, we're here to save the world with our bear hands. Sharpen teeth and wit to bite words down to size and the ideas of them too. I saw a man waiting for a train with a red hat and an ice heart, shattered and taped, his shadow falling over the crests of sound waves and ocean ones. Sip tea slowly, friend and don't let eyes fall until suns rise behind them because there is work to do in separating yolks and giving order to unsaid things. But here are the headlights and illumitory translations. Now maybe we'll see the peace sleeping on a pile of yesterday's newspapers with a snowflake crown. Now maybe we'll stumble down sidewalks and streets to meet this sleeping baby king. Sing him lullabies, Lay him rest in the curve crib of the moon. -BEENISHAHMED, R C JUNIOR Life as a celestial body earth must be maddeningly lonesome. yeah she's got us writhing about on her skin but it's like gloucester cried out in blind bitter rage, as microorganisms wriggling upon our skin are we to earth-undetectable until the microorganisms breed chaos. but even the microorganism duplicates, replicates, touches, reproduces. earth waltzes by herself through a vacuum, never touched never wanting to be touched and she'll burn you to a fucking crisp if you lay a goddamn finger on her. her huntress, banished by that one violent crash that launched her away from earth's delicate lapping shores, gets pushed farther away from her love, farther away from her fiery embrace. earth's blazing object of desire spins her around, drawing her closer then spinning her away in some cruel tango. oh how she would love to feel the fire press up against her own, oh how it would burn and oh how they would both blink out so quickly. -JOSH MENTER, LSA JUNIOR Auburn Lice my mom lay in the tub for two hours forcing me to use the toilet before I go in my Winnie the Pooh panties I go, watching her use silver scissors to cut her dark brown pubic hair into a straightvertical line she blames her stretch marks on me I think they're beautiful makingshapes like I do with the clouds I would get head lice all the time "from the kids at school" she would yell as her hands pulled off all the infested bed covers the Powerpuff Girls one and the blue dolphin one she put on white clear gloves and started mixing Revlon Auburn hair dye into my thick short hair, because it was cheaper than Nix. every time she would threaten to shave my head bald she calls numbers on the back of items and complains to receive free products 2 laundry soaps (Purex and Domino) because it was watery 4 cigarette boxes (Marlboro) because they were stale and 1 tube of Crest toothpaste when the tip of her middle finger was slammed off by a powder-puff blue steel door she would rub the healed part on my arms and face I cringed and laughed my mother tells me she can be like all mothers and kill me she miserably says "should've abandoned you ina dumpster." when Christmas came along she went to Salvation Army to get me gifts she wears a black leather jacket printed with flowers with navy jogging pants and K-Swiss tennis shoes hanging off her heels I had new clothes, my red corduroy pants that I would only wear if I wasn't eating or in the mud she rubbed Vicks vapor rub on my legs when I cried with growing pains made me warm green tea with milk and sugar when my stomach hurt she let me call her a bitch whenever she called me one LIMBS From Page 2B strangeness had caught up with her, tapped her on the shoulder, startling her like a stranger in the night. "I guess I'll leave you alone now." "No, I mean, it's OK. It's an OK thing to talk about." She laughed a mean laugh, her eyes drawn taught as though she was trying to humiliate herself for her own behavior, "That's nice of you to say, but I know this must be weird. I'm sorry." She turned to go. She goes, and as she does I want her not to feel so bad. I feel bad for making her feel bad. I try to reach for her, but I'm stuck scramblingto reach for her with the desperate, overworked arm I've got as well as the one I don't have. I want to pull her back to hold her shoulder tight, to tell her it's all right. I call out to her, "Hey, hey come back. It's OK." But she just keeps walking, and I'm still trying to get up and out of the damn pew.' When I get outside, she's gone like winter. There is sun but it's sad, clouded by all my many thoughts of the wrongs of dead hands. The sun rises, the sun shall rise again, dead but burning, fueled forever by the reversal of things, their voids, I know what she felt then. I too wanted to feel the void. I too want- ed to see my arm detached from me, distanced from my body, torn to shreds like all the bodies torn to shreds by my hand. I wanted to -JENNIFER REYNA, LSA SENIOR make the loss real, so I had to force myself to give up a real part, cut off that consuming guilt with a ser- rated kitchen knife until the hos- pital finished the task I'd so aptly ruined. All this, just to keep mov- ing, living, breathing. It's always all those little things. -Beenish Ahmed is a Residential College junior