by James Howe
   When he walks away without saying
   why or what I’d done or hadn’t done,
   I want to rip the necklace off
   and throw it at him. Like in the movies.
   But I’m not a drama queen, even
   when my heart is breaking. I will keep
   the necklace in the heart-shaped box.
   The fate of the CD is uncertain.
   Drama Queen, Revisited
   I throw myself on my bed, sending Johnson flying,
   and scream, NO ONE LOVES ME! at the top of my lungs.
   My grandmother has sold her house and is moving
   into a condominium (a ridiculous word), and my cat,
   my cat is dead (not you, Johnson), and my boyfriend
   has broken up with me, and it’s all proof that no one
   loves me or ever will!
   And look at me, look at me, what is happening to my body?
   NOTHING! I don’t even look like a little girl, I look like
   a little boy who’s been stretched. And yet, and yet, inside
   I feel so different, like I don’t even know my own body
   anymore or trust it to do what it once did on automatic.
   It used to be light and airy, like the fairy cape I wore
   one Halloween that came all the way from China. Now
   it’s like an itchy wool coat handed down from a relative
   I never even heard of, two sizes too big one day, two sizes
   too small the next, weighing me down, tripping me up.
   And I want my father to fly me through the air and
   I hate it when he treats me like a child, and I want DuShawn
   to love me and I don’t ever want to speak to him again,
   and where is my grandmother when I need her, and why
   are all my friends boys? And I wish Kennedy was here
   (no offense, Johnson) and I wish I hadn’t seen DuShawn
   go off with Tonni after he broke up with me and I wish
   I could see into the future and know that everything
   will be okay, even though I’m the kind of person
   who can’t bring herself to look at the last page of the book
   because I don’t want to spoil the surprise, but right now
   I don’t think I can stand the suspense. So tell me, somebody,
   tell me everything will be okay, and by everything I mean
   me.
   Reasons
   too tall
   too loud
   too pushy
   too proud
   too stubborn
   too bright
   too outspoken
   too white
   too bold
   too bossy
   too fussy
   too I told
   you so
   are any
   of these
   the reasons
   he broke
   up with me
   I don’t know
   I don’t know
   I don’t know
   I don’t know
   “We are lost inside the world”
   It’s a line from a poem by Naomi Shihab Nye
   that keeps playing in my head like a sad song
   with a familiar melody and words I think
   I am beginning to understand.
   Addie This &
   Addie That
   Fun
   The girl on the swing calls out,
   “Addie! Hey, Addie!”
   I can’t tell who it is. It’s dusk.
   It’s dark. I’m on my way
   home.
   She is the only one on the swing set,
   the only person in the playground
   that I can make out. Who is she
   and why is she calling
   to me?
   It doesn’t matter. It’s as much
   the swing’s rise and fall that calls me
   as it is the girl’s voice. I push open
   the iron gate, drop my backpack
   by the fence.
   “Swing with me, Addie!” Her head’s
   dropped back, her hair brushes
   the ground. Her feet point high
   as she pumps and cries,
   “To the moon!”
   To the moon! To the moon! I know
   now who it is, but how can it be?
   Why is Becca here, and why
   would she want to hang out
   with me?
   I start to speak, then don’t.
   I grab hold of the chains,
   push back onto the seat,
   let go, and begin to pump
   my feet.
   “To the moon!” I shout as higher
   we fly. I know she is there
   by the swish of air that sweeps
   my side, and the squeak
   of the swing,
   the steady, reassuring rhythm,
   the breathing that breaks into
   laughter, the one time she cries
   in answer to a question unasked,
   “Who cares!”
   As it grows dark we slow our
   swinging, then stop. Becca drops
   her feet to the ground with a gravelly
   crunch, says, “That was fun,” and
   is gone.
   I thought that little girls grew up
   and never came back. I thought
   I knew who Becca was. I pick up
   my backpack and say to the night,
   “That was fun.”
   Whatever
   The final project of the year.
   We’ll be working in pairs.
   Ms. Watkins calls my name.
   Bobby’s hand is in the air,
   but not before Becca goes,
   “I’ll work with Addie.
   Fine, whatever.”
   Everyone stares at her.
   She shrugs and sighs.
   I remember her
   calling, “Who cares!”
   as she pumped her
   swing higher and higher,
   and I say, to my surprise,
   “Fine with me.
   Whatever.”
   Crooked Smile
   Our private language is now extinct.
   Our jokes are no longer funny.
   DuShawn still has his crooked smile,
   but he smiles it just for Tonni.
   We meet each other only in glances.
   We eat lunch at separate tables.
   I see them holding hands each day.
   I’ll forget him when I’m able.
   Spring, When Things Begin to Blossom
   One morning, out of nowhere it seems,
   there they are, small to be sure, but enough
   that I tell my mother it’s time for me to get
   another bra.
   Addie This & Addie That
   “Oh my, yes,” says the woman who’s stopped me
   in the lingerie aisle of Awkworth & Ames, me
   trying to look like I’m just passing through and not
   standing with my mother directly in front of the
   junior bras.
   “Oh, yes,” the woman repeats, “at our house it’s Addie
   this and Addie that, isn’t it, Clay?” The man named Clay
   nods and says, “It sure is,” even while his eyes are telling us
   he’s never heard my name before.
   “It’s so nice to have you back in town,” my mother says,
   and the conversation is sidetracked into where-
   have-you-been and what-have-you-been-up-to and
   how-long-have-you-two-been-married, giving me plenty of time
   to picture the scene when Becca hears from her mom,
   You’ll never guess who I bumped into in the junior bra
   department at Awkworth & Ames and I just know
   how that’s going to play out at school on Monday so of course
   I’m already planning on being sick that day and maybe
   all week
   when I realize her mom is speaking 
to me again:
   “I think it’s gutsy of you to stand up for what you believe,
   wearing that duct tape over your mouth and all. And that time
   you told the whole class what you thought about domestic abuse,
   or whatever it was, well, Becca says you were just brilliant,
   that’s all. She only wishes she had your nerve. But I’m sure
   she’s told you all this herself, she certainly talks about it enough
   at home, doesn’t she, Clay?” Clay’s eyes have strayed to the next aisle
   where there’s a lot of lingerie involving lace, and I wish I could press
   an eject button and be rocketed out of here, but I am riveted
   to the spot. How could I not be, when I’m hearing
   what I’m hearing?
   “That’s nice” is all I can think of in response, but it’s enough
   for Mrs. Wrightsman, or whatever her name is now, to say,
   “You should come over sometime, Addie.”
   “Okay,” I mutter as my mother lifts up something involving daisies
   and turns to Becca’s mom and asks with a laugh, “What is
   the point of underwire in a junior bra?” And I wonder if there
   is such a thing as temporary death, because I have just died
   and I can only hope it’s temporary.
   Butterscotch Cookies
   Who knows if she’ll remember?
   Who knows why I’m doing it?
   But when she opens the door,
   sees the plate of butterscotch
   cookies in my hands and goes,
   “Omigod, I haven’t had those
   cookies in, like, years!” I have
   my answer to both questions.
   Two Girls, Hanging Out
   I can’t believe I am sitting
   on Becca Wrightsman’s bed,
   eating butterscotch cookies,
   discussing books we’ve read.
   I can’t believe she is wearing
   a shapeless shirt and jeans
   and not an ounce of makeup
   and not once acting mean.
   I can’t believe she is saying
   it’s been hard for her at school,
   trying to fit in again,
   trying to be cool.
   I can’t believe she is crying
   when I say I understand,
   then telling me she’s sorry
   for the gossip she began.
   I can’t believe she is asking
   if I still have the board game
   we always played at my house,
   she can’t recall its name.
   I can’t believe she is laughing
   at something I just said.
   I can’t believe I am sitting
   on Becca Wrightsman’s bed.
   The Funny Thing Is
   “On the day you wore that tape,” Becca says
   just before I leave for home, “things were getting
   out of hand, the teasing and the gossiping. I
   told my friends I wouldn’t do it anymore, and
   that’s when they cut me out, told me I was a loser
   too, told me the same things could happen to
   me that were happening to you. That’s why I
   was crying in the bathroom. I just, well, I guess
   I just wanted you to know.”
   “Thank you,” I say. We are standing on her front steps,
   waiting for my dad to show up, looking down at our feet
   or out at the street. When I spot his car I turn to Becca.
   “We have so much work to do on this project. Want
   to meet tomorrow? My house?”
   “Totally,” she says. “And, hey, maybe you can find
   that game we used to play. Omigod, wouldn’t that be
   so much fun?”
   “Totally,” I say. And the funny thing is, I mean it.
   When You Least Expect It
   Like when you go to put your CD in the player
   and Joni Mitchell’s in the slot, not because you
   put her there but because Grandma left her
   behind. Or you call Johnson “Kennedy” for the
   third time in one day. Or your hand in the dark
   touches the box by your bed and you can’t help
   yourself, you have to trace its outline with your
   fingers and think the word heart.
   It’s those times that surprise you with how much
   you can miss a grandmother, a cat, a boy.
   Grandma Calls and It’s As If She Knows
   Just What I Need to Hear Her Say
   Oh, I know I could have e-mailed,
   but I wanted to hear your voice.
   No, you keep that CD. Absolutely.
   You love Joni as much as I do.
   When are you coming for a visit?
   The guest room is waiting. I call it
   Addie’s Room. What? No, I don’t
   change the name for other people!
   Yes, I did see that Op-Ed piece in
   the Times, and I couldn’t agree more.
   How’s Johnson doing? And how
   are you, sweet pea? I hope
   you’re not still moping over that
   dreadful boy. No, he was nice,
   just immature, that’s all. I’m
   sorry he broke your heart.
   When is school done for the year?
   Well, you should have a party.
   You can too dance! Just let the
   music carry you, sweetheart.
   Remember what I always say:
   They’re all love songs.
   You don’t have to have a boyfriend
   or a girlfriend to know love.
   Just open up your heart and
   let the world in. Your heart
   is bigger than you can imagine,
   and so is the world, and so,
   granddaughter, are you.
   Letting the World In
   It happens so quietly I almost miss it. I am
   standing in a doorway with a plate of nachos
   in my hands, my dad behind me in the kitchen
   calling out, “Don’t fill up on those, there are
   enchiladas coming!” My mother going, “Oh,
   Graham,” in a voice that says they have known
   each other for a million years. And here,
   here, in the living room before me, my friends
   are dancing in their funny, awkward way,
   Bobby with Kelsey, Zachary with Joe, all trying
   to find the beat and not trip over Skeezie’s
   enormous, outstretched feet.
   My own feet begin to move, my knees begin
   to dip, my thrift store skirt starts to swirl,
   and this is when it happens so quietly I almost
   miss it.
   My heart opens
   and the world comes rushing in.
   I Am Who I Say I Am
   I am who I say I am,
   I’m not some fantasy
   of how you think you think you know me
   or who I ought to be.
   I am a girl who is growing up
   in my own sweet time,
   I am a girl who knows enough
   to know this life is mine.
   I am this and I am that and
   I am everything in-between,
   I’m a dreamer, I’m a dancer,
   I’m a part-time drama queen.
   I’m a worrier, I’m a warrior,
   I’m a loner and a friend,
   I’m an outspoken defender
   of justice to the end.
   I’m the girl in the mirror
   who likes the girl she sees,
   I’m the girl in the gypsy shawl
   with music in her knees.
   I’m a singer and a scholar,
   I’m a girl who has been kissed.
   I’m a solver of equations
   wearing bangles on my wrist.
   I am bi
gger than I ever knew,
   I am stronger than before,
   I am every girl I have ever been,
   and all that are in store.
   I am who I say I am.
   I’m not some fantasy.
   I am the me I am inside.
   I am who
   I choose
   to be.
   Acknowledgments
   In one way or another, many voices contributed to the making of this book.
   In poetry: Alan Shapiro and my fellow students in Alan’s poetry workshop at the Fine Arts Work Center, Provincetown, Massachusetts. In addition to these fine poets, I am indebted to the work of Billy Collins, Donald Hall, Marie Howe, Ted Kooser, Dorianne Laux, W. S. Merwin, Naomi Shihab Nye, Sharon Olds, Mary Oliver, and Linda Pastan.
   In song: Leonard Cohen, Ani DiFranco, Thea Gilmore, Patty Griffin, Janis Ian, Joni Mitchell, Tom Waits, Dar Williams, and Lucinda Williams.
   In inspiration: Maureen Ryan Griffin, friend and poet, for reigniting my love of poetry. Shari Conradson and her eighth-grade students in Sebastopol, California, for their many letters and insights over the years, with special thanks to Shari for her friendship and to Hannah Maschwitz, who wrote in a letter about The Misfits, “I love Addie’s character! She’s got a strong personality, but sometimes I think that the readers don’t actually know what her soft side is.” These words were the key that enabled me to open the door to this book after two years of trying.
   In Addie-tude: In addition to Shari: Cathryn Berger Kaye, C. J. Bott, Lucy Calkins, Lisa de Mauro, Lisa Duquette, Helise Harrington, Sue Hagadorn, Deborah Holmes, Mary Jane Karger, Connie Kirk, Lisa McGilloway, Jane Roberts, Janet Trumble, and Kate Walton.
   In support and friendship: My colleagues, friends, and family. There are too many individuals to mention without fear of leaving someone out, but I must acknowledge my special debt of gratitude to my very supportive family, Sy Bucholz, Dan Darigan, Arielle Ferrell, Donald Ferrell and Joanna Mintzer, Donald R. Gallo, Robin Jilton, Judy Leipzig and John Gallagher, Tom Owens and Diana Helmer, Richie Partington, Kristy Raffensberger, Richard and Roni Schotter, Ginee Seo, Melissa Whitcraft and Steven Mintz, and Richard Wilson.