Short Story by Rey David Morales of Cerro Coso Community College
2015 Met Awards - Second Place for College Fiction
Foamy water swirls and crashes in the stainless steel sink. It washes over white porcelain as plates are heaved, one by one, out of their sudsy depths. Set aside to dry after inspection, the dishwasher contemplates a time when dishes were in fact made of pearl. Pearl diver, that sounds much more impressive. The Crew Cuts play on the radio. The cook, a man in his twenties with a short stature but athletic build, sings along to the hopeful dreams of ancient pop stars as he prepares the next meal. The front door bell jingles loudly.
“Looks like he’s here,” the cook says with a smile. “After this order I am going out there to the front to cover for you-know-who. Be on your best behavior with Big Chief, okay?”
Big Chief is actually the owner of the restaurant and the boss, and genuinely an easy going guy. Cook makes his exit out the Westernesque red double doors to the main dining hall to take on his new role as a waiter. The boss makes his entrance. He is a short, slightly overweight man of fifty-ish, wearing a signature trucker cap with the name of the eatery embroidered on the front. They exchange pleasantries and continue working.
After a few orders business dies down. The boss, in his idleness, strikes up a conversation with the dishwasher.
“¿Como Estudo?” he asks. The boss speaks no English. Though he can read and write it and somewhat understood when someone is trying to get his point across, his tongue never mastered it.
“Bien, mas o menos,” the dishwasher responds in his Chicano tongue. They then discuss other areas of life such as one’s condition both in health and romance. The dishwasher always says he’s doing well in both (a harmless half-truth). Another subject that comes up is family, particularly how the dishwasher’s two sisters are fairing since leaving his employment the previous spring. They were peaceful departures. The dishwasher says they are both fine. One has gone into business with a friend and the other now works as a social worker in the city. The boss admits that he misses them. They were good people who would never pull the “crap” his senior waitress—the woman the cook is filling in for now—pulls.
The boss asks how his studies are going. The dishwasher states (like a Catholic prayer) that he graduated high school last year, and furthermore, it’s now the middle of summer. The boss nods in remembrance and asks what he’s planning on doing now. The dishwasher doesn’t know.
Soon a big table arrives and the dishwasher is thrown to the front so that the cook can help the boss with the order, as the Cook puts it, of “Ronald Calderon” proportions. The dishwasher hates working the front. For some strange reason he feels a strange wave of embarrassment whenever he sees a familiar face. It’s not so much the individual that gives him shame but the blank smiles they give him, eyes that say they are but common restaurant-goers with no concern for anyone outside their booths, a look that the dishwasher had not experienced a year earlier. Maybe he had given it, too.
No faces today. The dishwasher works the floor efficiently and at ease. Eventually the customers leave and the day turns to night. The boss leaves early, telling them they did a fine job and to keep his share of night’s tips. The cook gives him some anyway.
A lonely stranger stumbles in toward closing time.
“Hey, can you handle this?” the cook says, “I’m going to start getting ready for clean up.” He heads into the kitchen.
The stranger staggers to the cashier’s counter and stops himself from slamming into it. He asks if they sell chile verde but wrapped in a tortilla. The dishwasher asks if he means chile verde burritos and receives a fervent “Yes! To Go.” He pays with a debit card and attempts to get cash back. The dishwasher tells him that service isn’t offered here. The man apologizes and sits down.
When his order is finished he grabs it with shaky hands, states, “The Misses thanks you,” and stumbles out. The dishwasher goes to the back.
“Geez, did you see that guy? He was on something for sure.”
“Yeah, I know him,” the cook says. “Name’s Donald.”
“Donald?”
“Yeah, went to school with my dad, I guess he was some kind of genius. Got a perfect score on his SATs, every university wanted him.”
“What HAPPENED?”
“Don’t know exactly. Stayed for some girl, girl got hooked on meth, he did too. Last I heard his ‘Sweetheart’ left a few years back and he shacked up with someone else.”
“A genius … he could have gone anywhere he wanted.”
“Where else would he go, this town’s awesome.”
The dishwasher refuses a ride home only to discover he can’t be picked up. He begins his thirty-five minute walk home. There are few street lights in town. Save for a few passing cars, the trek is mostly dark. Along the way he passes streets where old friends once lived, illuminated by dull moonlight.
He still thinks about her sometimes. About words unsaid and flesh that never really touched. But the stars are beautiful here. He takes a short-cut through a dirt alleyway lined with wooden fences. Halfway through the path one of the town’s only streetlights illuminates a familiar figure, a crushed Styrofoam container lying next to it. Heart pounding, he walks up to it. It’s Donald, apparently mugged, face stomped, a torn wallet at his hand.
He fought desperately for that wallet, not for the currency in it but the words stitched into it: To my Einstein. –B. Between his fingers is clutched a picture—of a younger man and a pretty woman.
The dishwasher quits the following month. He is gone by summer’s end.
Monday, September 28, 2015
Monday, September 21, 2015
Psychological Evaluations of Byron, Shelley, and Keats
2015 Met Awards - First Place for College Creative Non-Fiction
__________
San Jose City College
Disabled Poets Program & Services
2100 Moorpark Ave.
Poet Services Building
San Jose, CA. 95128
Re: Byron, Shelley and Keats
Disabled Poets Program & Services
2100 Moorpark Ave.
Poet Services Building
San Jose, CA. 95128
Re: Byron, Shelley and Keats
PSYCHOLOGICAL
EVALUATIONS
Names:
Byron, Shelley and Keats
Sexes: Male
File Name: Romantic
Poets, Second Generation
Ages: All
died before their time
Prepared
for: San Jose Poets Clinic
Date of Report: 3.13.2014
Completed
by: Reagan E. Wolfe, PhD, FACFE, DABPS
CONFIDENTIALITY STATEMENT:
The information contained herein in
this document is intended only for the individual addressed and may contain
information that is privileged and prohibited from disclosure to any other
party under the applicable law. This
information is to be considered extremely confidential and is to be released
only to duly authorized agencies or individuals. This information is intended only for the use
of the individuals named above. If you are not the intended recipient, you are
hereby notified that reading, disseminating, disclosing, distributing, copying,
acting upon or otherwise using this information in this document is strictly
prohibited.
Presenting
Problem:
John Keats
is a white male who is in his early twenties.
He is self-referred for an evaluation to assess for a learning
disability stemming from his inability as he reports to write poetry. He states, “When I write poetry, it just
doesn’t come as easy to me as it does for my contemporaries, although I do
write a lot of material.” In addition, he reports an ongoing difficulty with
attention, he is high-strung, and has distraction factors which in turn trigger
a sense of depression. The overall
results of the Millon College Counseling Inventory (MCCI) point toward
elevated scores of a moderate Anxiety
disorder. Results also suggest that
he has difficulty with sustaining energy and effort with his many other tasks
which include apothecary duties, medical training and assisting surgeons. He
acknowledges he is experiencing a Dysthymic
mood, resulting in a feeling of dejection and feelings of inadequacy,
perhaps stemming from the loss of his parents at a young age. In addition this mood may have caused his
inability to commit full-time to writing poetry, sooner. Last, he has an elevated score on the Clinical
Personality Patterns on the Compulsive
scale (score of 94) known as
Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder. This score suggests he can be
behaviorally rigid, meticulous, may be a perfectionist and an overachiever.
Presenting
Problem:
Lord Byron A.K.A.
George Gordon Byron, is a white male who is in his mid-thirties. He was referred by Samuel T. Coleridge who
was previously treated for a significant form of hero worship (Shakespeare and
Milton). Lord Byron presents himself as
a larger than life person who actually writes about heroes perhaps as a way to
fulfill unsatisfied desires or as a form of seeking an identity (perhaps one
like Zorro). He also admits that he is a
risk-taker who has amassed large debts and who also has a sex-addiction. He has an elevated score on the Clinical
Personality Patterns on the Compulsive
scale (score of 150) known as Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder.
This score suggests he has a repetitive lifestyle with patterned
behaviors. Fear of social disapproval
can lead him to suppress his strong resentment and anger toward those whose
approval he seeks. Results on the Brown
Attention Deficit Scale – Adults indicate that there may be a function
of attention deficit operating with this individual. Such individuals tend to
be slow in getting started and have difficulty in getting organized, because of
being scattered or being inhibited by worry (Organizing and activating for
poetry).
Presenting
Problem:
Percy Bysshe
Shelley is a white male who is in his late twenties. He has been referred by
his wife Mary who is concerned with his sociopathic tendencies. Shelley states that he suffers from various
phobias which culminated from a difficult childhood in which he was the victim
of excessive bullying. As a result of
his bullying, he participated in sadistic behaviors that he attempted to
downplay as harmless pranks. These
‘pranks’ as he called them included electrifying doors. With regard to Clinical Syndromes, results
indicate that Mr. Shelley is feeling extremely apprehensive, (Anxiety, 82) or specifically phobic, is
typically tense, indecisive, and restless.
He may experience a notable sense that problems are imminent. For example, he may worry that he needs to
fully represent common man in notable causes because poets are people who enact
laws. He may also exhibit a hyperalertness to his environment (natural elements
such as the sky and weather). He also exhibits
a generalized sense of tension.
Monday, September 14, 2015
Seventeen
Poem by Kelsey Saxton Hire, Senior at Burroughs High School
2015 Met Awards - First Place for High School Poetry
At seventeen
I never feel clean
I wear my
Stained cheeks
After weeks
When the
Silence breaks
And cuts
So deep
I can’t sleep
At seventeen
I always feel mean
I say
What I feel
As I
Try to heal
I see
Myself burn
As I
Try to learn
At seventeen
I never feel seen
I fall
To the floor
As I
Lose the war
My armor
Is darker
As my tears
And my fears
Lace a
Hopeful face
At seventeen
I do feel lifeless
But my
Tears truly
Remind me
I am
Human not
A mess
2015 Met Awards - First Place for High School Poetry
At seventeen
I never feel clean
I wear my
Stained cheeks
After weeks
When the
Silence breaks
And cuts
So deep
I can’t sleep
At seventeen
I always feel mean
I say
What I feel
As I
Try to heal
I see
Myself burn
As I
Try to learn
At seventeen
I never feel seen
I fall
To the floor
As I
Lose the war
My armor
Is darker
As my tears
And my fears
Lace a
Hopeful face
At seventeen
I do feel lifeless
But my
Tears truly
Remind me
I am
Human not
A mess
Monday, September 07, 2015
Undecided
Poem by Jennifer Jones of Cerro Coso Community College
2015 Met Awards - First Place for College Poetry
A red string tied tight around a ring finger.
Reminds me of what,
or who, I'm tied to.
I try to live around it,
this inconvenience.
A red string that tangles in the fingers
of a nice boy. He stops holding my hand.
Sometimes I travel, wrap the red string
round my wrist, my arm.
Heartbeat drumming, I always turn around
and watch it unravel.
2015 Met Awards - First Place for College Poetry
A red string tied tight around a ring finger.
Reminds me of what,
or who, I'm tied to.
I try to live around it,
this inconvenience.
A red string that tangles in the fingers
of a nice boy. He stops holding my hand.
Sometimes I travel, wrap the red string
round my wrist, my arm.
Heartbeat drumming, I always turn around
and watch it unravel.
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