Friday, March 27, 2009

At the ballet on Saturday night ...

I saw a middle-aged couple in the lobby. The lady wore a black floral print skirt, charcoal hose, and a cream-colored sleeveless top. Her hair, a blond dye job, was arranged in a loose French twist, and her skin looked leathery and lightly tanned. The man was about six inches taller than she. His left hand and wrist were encased in a funky elastic bandage resembling a fingerless glove, and he was wearing horn-rimmed glasses, grayish-brown slacks, and a cranberry polo shirt. His straight brown hair was shiny-slick with some kind of preparation. After a short while, the woman and man turned to move elsewhere; in doing this, he grabbed her arm and jerked her toward the direction he had in mind, as one might roughly redirect a child who'd already been scolded twice that evening.

At the ballet on Saturday night ...

someone sitting near me was broadcasting the camphoraceous smell of moth balls.

At the ballet on Saturday night ...

the heavy velvet curtain continued lowering long after touching the stage, its vertical pleats forming a chorus-line of red and wrinkled elephants' legs.

At the ballet on Saturday night ...

I saw a teenage couple in the lobby. The young man wore a gray shirt with button-down collars and a striped tie. He had a floppy mop of sandy hair and a meager mustache and goatee. The glowing young woman clinging to him had tawny skin, darting eyes, and shimmering shoulder-length hair the color of Godiva chocolate. Her spaghetti-strapped crimson sheath plunged deep below her waist in back and confirmed the absence of panties with form-hugging chutzpah. Turning toward Susan, I nodded in their direction and said, "That boy doesn't have a chance."

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2 comments:

  1. Imagine if we all saw day to day life through this kind of microscope. It would give us all an immense appreciation for the beauty in all aspects of or life even the simple ones. It brings true meaning to the events that take place in our own lives on those of others around us. You capture what seeing things in that light really does. I particularly like the last sentence when instead of using the tired and useless cliche, "How does a guy like that land a girl like her?"

    We are now able to see the truth, he doesn't...

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  2. I appreciate your comment immensely. Thanks so much for reading my blog.

    ReplyDelete