Wednesday, May 14, 2025

To My Old Addresses

The other day I wrote to a friend, "I wrote this poem this morning. I may have written this poem before? It's a memory that has stuck with me. Maybe I never wrote about it at all, but it feels like I did because I think about it often. And that's a squirrely little trick of memory, isn't it?" 

Well, this isn't the same poem that I was referring to in my email. This is two poems I discovered this morning, both inspired by Kenneth Koch's "To My Old Addresses," but written at different times in my life. Proof you can go home again, over and over. Proof that there is never enough time, that your memories are faulty, and that you may have favorite phrasings for those memories. It's possible I wrote the second poem with the first one from 2017 open beside it, in fact I must have, because there are repeated phrasings. I do recall using Google maps to find my old apartment on Main Street in Wilkes-Barre while writing the second one. I feel like a sleuth in my own memoir, moving through all the rooms of these homes, bumping into invisible furniture. These poems are all about process, and processing. 

This first one is from 2017.

To My Old Addresses

316 Ramapo Valley Road:

The apple tree, a yawn of lawn

where my father planted a vegetable garden,

porch where we played,

a banister where my sister

lost a tooth, the accordion door

to my bedroom. Traffic

lights told stories on my walls.



Address forgotten:

Red shag carpet, a loft, and stairs

with a space underneath I turned

into a post office. The pond my sister and I named

Anniversary Pond, we skated and I fell

in love with the idea

of what is underneath the surfaces

of the world. So many.


21 Huron Circle:

A dogwood tree, a deck with a space

left for a tree to grow through it, rooms

where my sister and I slammed doors

or created radio shows, a forest sizzling

with cicadas, dirt roads, a lake and a canoe.

The woods where I grew up, my parents

were so young in t-shirts and jeans,

my grandmothers visited on Sundays,

holidays, and birthdays.


118 Green Street:

first apartment during college,

my roommate’s knick-knacks and kimchee,

and the Peeping Tom

who left a mountain of cigarette butts

on the lawn by the kitchen window.


115 Main Street:

Not enough outlets to have

the fishtank and the coffeepot

plugged in at the same time,

a landlord who clipped his toenails

while my grandmothers visited

his real estate office. Green

shag carpeting. A kitchen table

from the 1960s, all vinyl and chrome.

My grocery receipts included

items that were a dollar or less.


221 South State Street:

Home with Mom and Dad

for a summer, then for a year or so

of a self-imposed college sabbatical.

Scrabble on the side porch, dinners with dad

while mom worked the three to eleven shift

at the hospital. House full of light.


One Hundred and Something North Main Street:

Three flights up to a layered torte

of more green shag carpeting. My father

paid burly co-workers to help him

haul my apartment sized piano

up all those stairs. I didn’t play

it enough for that.


135 W. Franklin Street:

A slow chain of buildings with

blue doors, and a train that howled

at 1 a.m. every morning.

Roaches were a staple

in the kitchen.

Traps everywhere, scuttling

when the lights were flipped on.


1148 Buttonwood Street:

Eight months pregnant, I painted

the ceiling of the bedroom

in our brick rowhome, and slept

on a mattress on the floor.

My daughter’s first smile,

first tooth, first steps.

Then, gunfire.

Feuding neighbors threw eggs

at each other in the street.

We moved.


118 Oak Street:

Two floors we rented. Cherry tree in the back,

a kitchen big enough to dance in.

Long walks in the strip-mined land

my daughter called “The Jungle.”


25 Armstrong Street:

The first house I bought.

My dad raised his eyebrow.

Not one right angle in it,

thanks to coal barons

who robbed the pillars.

The love of my life helped

paint the rooms alive again.

My daughter

wore a cat tail, a ladybug costume

a prom dress, a graduation cap,

and then a baker’s toque.

When it was time to leave,

we packed everything

but the years of growth

marked on the doorjamb.

--

This one is from 2024:


To My Old Addresses


316 Ramapo Valley Road, Oakland, New Jersey:

apple tree

pancake

yawn of lawn, garden radish,

my bicycle best friend Billy,

clouds,

gerbils mazed in a habitrail, wooden blocks,

my sister

lost a tooth, an accordion

opened to my bedroom,

traffic lights told

stories on the walls,

a burglar left a dark star in the window.


Rental A-Frame in Valley of Lakes, Pennsylvania:

The woods full of earaches,

I was thinned by a flu.

My sister and I skated

on our secret pond,

dashed through reeds,

made houses within

the house, lived in them

as if they held our futures.



21 Huron Circle, Valley of Lakes, Pennsylvania:

A dogwood, deck with space

left for a tree to grow through it, rooms

where my sister and I slammed doors

at each other or created radio shows.

Summer woods sizzled with cicadas,

dirt roads led to nowhere,

a lake, a canoe we overturned.

The dog we buried with a cairn

by the garage, my parents young

in t-shirts and jeans,

GG Romayne and Helen still alive

to sashay into our Sunday dinners.


118 Green Street, Nanticoke, Pennsylvania:

My first college apartment,

independent, I thought,

except I didn’t pay rent.

My roomie was a best friend

from high school with knick-knacks galore

and a kimchee habit.

A peeping Tom

left a mountain of cigarette butts

by our uncurtained kitchen window.


115 Main Street, Nanticoke, Pennsylvania:

The landlord, Albert of the Cigar

and Grey-shirted Potbelly, lurked

on my roof porch, insisted

I take no male visitors,

clipped his toenails

in front of my grandmothers

once as they waited for me to return.

My apartment didn’t have enough

outlets to have a fish tank and the coffeepot

plugged in at the same time,

but it came with a kitchen table

from the 1960s, a vinyl

boomerang design, and chrome.

My grocery receipts while I lived there

included only items that were a dollar or less.



221 South State Street, Ephrata, Pennsylvania:

Back with Mom and Dad for a summer,

then for a year or so of self-imposed college sabbatical,

I received letters from lovers and friends,

turned the space above the garage into

an art studio where I made greeting cards,

and wrote poems. The neighbor’s “brother”

arrived each morning in his suspenders

to unzip his pants and pee on her garage

before visiting her. The fire department

alarm went off regularly, our dog escaped

and ran up the street. The Gehr’s little dog

yapped through the fence. We played Scrabble

on the side porch, and I had dinners with dad

while mom worked the three to eleven shift

at the hospital. I remember a house full of light.

Decades later I emptied it all with my sister,

put it up for sale.


521 North Main Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania:

Three flights up to a layered torte

of boozy scented green shag carpeting.

My father paid burly co-workers to help him

haul my apartment sized piano

up all those stairs. I didn’t play

it enough for that. An ex lurked

in my hallway, I worked a 9-5

at the Donnelley Directory,

shopped at the Oh Yes! Chicken Mart

down the street. Painting and crying

one night I drank vodka straight

out of an iced tea glass then rolled off

the bed to vomit into the carpet.

I turned on the radio

and the blender for the noise

to keep me awake,

alive.


135 W. Franklin Street, Topton, Pennsylvania:

A town away from the university

where I decided to complete my education,

but never did, I painted and wrote in a chain of buildings

with identical blue doors, and a train that howled

at 1 a.m. every morning. Roaches were a staple.

Traps everywhere.


1148 Buttonwood Street, Reading, Pennsylvania:

Eight months pregnant, I painted

the ceiling of the bedroom

in our brick rowhome, and slept

on a mattress on the floor.

My daughter’s first smile,

first tooth, first steps.

Then, gunfire.

Feuding neighbors threw eggs

at each other in the street.


118 Oak Street, Nanticoke, Pennsylvania:

Two rented floors in the place where I thought

I belonged. Cherry tree in the back,

a kitchen big enough to dance in, but we never did.

Instead, we fought over a melted wax

accident when he tried to make encaustics.

Long walks in the strip-mined land

my daughter called “The Jungle.”

Abandoned sofas, beer bottles, fire pits,

the stripped land still hot to the touch

and sulfurous.


25 Armstrong Street, Edwardsville, Pennsylvania:

The first house I bought. My dad raised his eyebrow.

Not one right angle in it, thanks to coal barons

who robbed the pillars. Hell’s mouths opened up

in the yard, the street.

My daughter wore a cat tail,

a ladybug costume,

a prom dress,

a graduation cap,

and then a baker’s toque.

The love of my life helped

paint the rooms alive again

after a divorce, the bamboo

sang to me in the morning.

Not long after a neighbor shot out

my daughter’s windows,

we repaired and rented the house,

then sold it.


153 E. King Street, Lancaster, Pennsylvania:

We downsized to upscale, sold everything for marble

countertops and a balcony view of historic brick

against blue sky. City street cleaning began

at 3 a.m. with a gas powered leaf blower,

trucks always hit the pothole right outside our bedroom.

His father moved in, took over the second bedroom

for a year, and my mother visited for Sunday soufflés

and games of Miles Bournes until she forgot how to find us.

We played a game of Hide and Seek.


29 Diamond Spring Circle, Akron, Pennsylvania:

I collaged the bathroom wall, turned

the tiny extra bedroom into my writing space,

backed the car out of the attached garage

to turn it into “The Little Theatre of the House of the Car”

where we held open mic nights.

An enormous tree filled the yard,

neighbors became friends,

I walked past the shush of wheat fields

to memorize lines from Shakespeare.

Helen moved into the basement

and turned it into an apartment,

Dan moved away to care for his father,

the cat destroyed the sofa, I helped

my mother in ways that felt intrusive,

but I could still make her laugh.


2979 Kutztown Road, East Greenville:

A pond to boat and skate on, a house

full of drafts and ghosts, an electrical fire

that shot out the outlets. I raised 40 or so

ducks, two goats, and two dopey sheep. Dan

followed his dream of growing his own food —

tomatoes, squashes, corn, peanuts, kolrahbi.

I turned the old barn into a theatre.

Dying ash trees knocked power out on the coldest

of days, I got chilblains. We committed horrible acts

of farm mercy, locals shouted “faggots!” at us

as they roared down the road full of potholes.

I became the quirky lady next door to Archer and Gus,

who I watched daily as they waited for the school bus.

We balanced feathers, made art, fed the goats,

created a game with a hula hoop and a hammock,

and turned feral cats into pets. My mother visited

once from the nursing home to say “It’s like a dream.”

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