Silence Redux // Flat tire therapy // Future Writer

by Diana Raab

Silence redux

Unlike others in my past, your being

is not one which hangs or hovers over me,

 

but you permeate and effuse my ethers,

making a mark like leaky fountain pens

 

we shared during our second coffee,

as we licked our tongues to chocolate covered ginger crystals,

 

glowing like your glistening eyes when you saw me walk out

of my boudoir dressed in black and ready to pounce

 

on that part of you which brought out the woman in me,

as I watched purple ink drip from its nib in a fascination

 

of allure and anticipation, wanting to get to know someone

or spend a life with someone one will never really know

 

because this ink will evaporate, dry up and become invisible

like the imaginary person you are, the day before we met,

and the year before I was silenced.

Flat tire therapy

Yesterday after five drought years
followed by fourteen rainy days,
our newly constructed neighborhood
became smothered with nails
spread across main pathways.


Without knowing it, and as luck would have it
my car rolled over one very rusty one.
Left my car in the garage overnight
and the following morning received a notification
of low air pressure in my left rear tire.


The sweet service station guy
elevated my car to examine its belly
to learn of a nail in its gentle side wall.


One new tire for sure, three more
to keep tread even—Monday morning news
while my therapist
was calling about a scheduled appointment.
A flat tire she asked, which one?


Left rear:
wait a minute, I need to check something out;
Let me tell you what that means,
She said flipping through her book.
Never mind, I said, I just need more air
Let me cancel this appointment.

Future writer

It must have been sixth grade

when I wrote my first essay,

subject details no longer crisp,

but it was surely before grandma

killed herself in her bedroom beside mine

and about the time she taught me

to type on the Remington typewriter

perched on her vanity.

 

All twenty of us in that classroom

seated at those old birch desks

with chairs attached

where you carefully lifted the top

so not to jam your fingers

to see inside all your

favorite writing instruments

and papers.

 

Outside, the large schoolyard with the

maypole signaling my birthday,

the class quietly writing,

and Mr. Lopez, my English teacher

who sometimes did the calypso

on our desks,

roamed the room peeking over

some shoulders, when suddenly

I realized he was over mine,

as he whispered into my ear

“that’s great writing, you’ll

be a writer one day.”

 

Only years later did his comment

stop me in my tracks and impact me,

on how childhood passions and words

live with us forever

and how what we remember

is always surprising.

Diana Raab, MFA, PhD, is a memoirist, poet, workshop leader, thought-leader and award-winning author of 14 books and editor of three anthologies. Her work has been widely published and anthologized. Her poems have been nominated for the Pushcart Prize and The Best of the Net. She frequently speaks and writes on writing for healing and transformation. Her latest book is an anthology called, Women in A Golden State: California Poets at 60 and Beyond (Gunpowder Press, 2025). Her newest memoir is Hummingbird: Messages from My Ancestors (Modern History Press, 2024). Raab writes for Psychology Today, The Good Men Project, Sixty and Me, Medium, and is a guest writer for many others.