You Bring Out

By P.J. German

You bring out the English in me

The proper man who opens your door

And walks on the outside of the sidewalk

You bring out the German in me

The shove you in the oven and bake you

Till your skin bubbles like leavened bread

You bring out the Irish in me

The drown my sorrows in alcohol

Because you’re not the blarney stone I wished for

You bring out the American in me

Bar/club hopping, dancing with strangers

Grinding my body against her’s to forget you

You bring out the ass in me

The sarcastic jerk

The comedic know-it-all

The ‘I don’t care you’re hurt’

The problematic problem solver and

The paranoid analyzer

But most of all

You bring out the forgiveness in me

PJ German – former editor in chief for two semesters and current student advisor of Elektraphrog, president of Swamp Scribes, student blogger for the SCF website, and teacher aid in the English lab – does much more writing than he has time for. He is graduating in 2010 with his A.A., and will attend USF in the fall to continue his education in English.

Shooting Brunettes

by P. J. German

 

 

It was a cold morning. The snow had stopped, but its result was left upon the ground. The only green in sight were the pine trees. Autumn gave way to winter early this year, and most of the trees were asleep, naked. My father and I stepped out of the bright red pickup truck, both of us wearing battle fatigue. He picked up his rifle and he handed me mine. Then we walked into the woods: A professional and an amateur, a father and a son. We hunkered down behind a fallen tree and waited. ‘There,’ my father finally said. I turned to where he pointed, and I saw her: Fair-skinned, dark eyes, large chest, and a brunette. We only shot brunettes. It seemed that was the only color hair they had. I raised my rifle, tunneled my vision through the scope, and locked in to the throat. I pulled the trigger, and through the scope lens, I saw the blood spurt from the wound. The thunderous explosion sent the birds soaring through the air. She fell, dead upon the floor. My father patted me on the back as he said, ‘Well done, son. Good shot.’ His pat on my back told me I was now a man in his eyes. I can shoot and kill just like him, and that made me a man.

 

 

PJ German – former editor in chief for two semesters and current student advisor of Elektraphrog, president of Swamp Scribes, student blogger for the SCF website, and teacher aid in the English lab – does much more writing than he has time for. He is graduating in 2010 with his A.A., and will attend USF in the fall to continue his education in English.

My Hero

by P. J. German


 

‘At that point Peter got up the nerve to ask,

“Master, how many times do I forgive a brother

or sister

who hurts me? Seven?”

Jesus replied

“Seven! Hardly.

Try seventy times seven.”’

 

Matthew 18.21-22

(The Message)

 

I’m supposed to tell you I forgive you

but I don’t know if I should or can

you see

I never knew it would be like this

or for this long

all the built up anger

you think I did this to myself

but you’re the man who threw me across the room

you’re the man who downed the bottle

then cast demons into me like Jesus did the swine

I might walk close to the edge,

but I won’t be jumping off the cliff any time soon

 

PJ German – former editor in chief for two semesters and current student advisor of Elektraphrog, president of Swamp Scribes, student blogger for the SCF website, and teacher aid in the English lab – does much more writing than he has time for. He is graduating in 2010 with his A.A., and will attend USF in the fall to continue his education in English.

SCF Whodunnit?

by P.J. German


 

When the cops found out, all hell broke loose.

Who molested the alligator?

Dr. Hafner was not at all pleased.

It was his pet from St. Petersburg.

The gator screamed, ‘Somebody touched me!’

 

They first accused Dr. Ford with all

of his dark, crazy, Poe fantasies.

He was quickly ruled out of the crime;

He was busy with Elektraphrog.

Ford said, ‘This would make a great story.’

 

Could it have been Advisor Snyder?

No. He was in a meeting. He is

always in a meeting, a meeting…

He said, ‘Let’s give it a Baycare card.

They might have a gator outreach plan.’

 

Perhaps, was it Professor Waters?

But, nay, he was pinning up Einstein

on his wall – the wall of math’ticians.

John said, ‘We should grill up the gator,

if it is traumatized that badly.’

 

Zaph Manigat? Yes, it has to be!

How else could he get on the website?

He has to be having an affair.

He – the Zaph – said, ‘Hi, my name is Zaph!

Mmmbluh, rrrvuh luh gut shuh luhguss.

 

After lengthy investigations,

suspects were cleared of activity.

It was later discovered Gator

was molested by a manatee.

 


PJ German – former editor in chief for two semesters and current student advisor of Elektraphrog, president of Swamp Scribes, student blogger for the SCF website, and teacher aid in the English lab – does much more writing than he has time for. He is graduating in 2010 with his A.A., and will attend USF in the fall to continue his education in English.

Who Am I? God Only Knows!

 by Woody McCree

 

 

I’m Confucian,

I’m a Buddhist,

I’m a Mystic injudicious.

 

I’m a Hindu,

I’m a Christian,

I’m a Daoist Judaistic.

 

Every moment I keep changing,

Every world-view rearranging.

Don’t go thinking I am faithless;

There is method to my madness.

 

All beliefs are fluxuating,

Rapid hyper-ventilating,

Kalaidoscopic mind-rotating.

 

All for one and one for all-

Allah, Krishna, Yahweh, Kali.

The tilt-a-whirl just keeps on spinning;

Where it stops nobody knows.

But take a bit of consolation-

Here all ends are new beginnings.

Woody McCree is a professor of religion and philosophy at the State College of Florida

 

 

A Grave-Digger in Spring (For My Father)

 

 

 

 

 

 

by Woody McCree

 

The grate of a shovel in sandy soil,

The soft thud

Of earth tossed from heap to hole:

Return to your mother,

Return to the earth.

 

The decaying leaves settle into the ground,

Forced loose from branches

By the last full freeze

And the sprigs pushing outward

To replace them.

 

In this slow and gentle rustle,

You nestle,

Pressed down

Beneath the weight of dirt heaped over you

Like an ancient Celtic mound.

 

The clover bloom

As you make your home

In the deep damp,

Companion of the glossy brown.

 

But know,

A sacred oak shall grow here,

The moonlit axis

Of a great stone circle:

 

You shall be a tree again one day.

Woody McCree is a professor of religion and philosophy at the State College of Florida.

BECAUSE SANTA HAD A RASH

by Douglas Ford

“Krampus is the anti-Santa and one evil son-of-a-bitch. On Christmas, if you run into Krampus instead of Santa, you know you’ve fucked up. You’ve been bad. Really bad. If you don’t believe me, just Google it. If I’m lying, God strike me dead now. Just don’t send Krampus. I’d rather God come after me. That Krampus, he’s one mean s.o.b.”
–a man overheard by the author while waiting in line to visit the mall Santa


We think Rudolph’s glowing nose caused the affliction.

All that radiation, you know.

Before we got smart and built a containment unit, we just let Rudolph roam about wherever he pleased.

Big mistake.

Forty elves lost all their hair the first year. Santa had to keep them all out of sight. No mall appearances, just stand-ins that season. No one could accuse us of misunderstanding the importance of appearance. Try to explain to little Johnny who just wants a fire truck why the elves look like aborted fetuses.

Anyway. The rash on Santa–we didn’t notice it at first because of his usual red cheeks and red suit. Those inflamed pustules blended right in until they started bursting, probably because of the constant scratching.

Like I said, the radiation, and all that exposure, Christmas after Christmas.

The scratching concerned us, but Santa’s behavior after that downright alarmed us. Hallucinations had set in, though we didn’t think much of them at first. Said he kept seeing stars, but we see a lot of stars up here. Then the pustules began bursting, and all that green! It could have looked festive if it hadn’t made his beard so crusty. Then the outbursts; the throat-tearing; the biting. So we put Santa in the containment unit—with Rudolph, yes, and we just hoped for the best. For both of them.

What about Christmas then? We had a solution, if a radical one. But you know what they say about desperate times. So we unchained Krampus, the one once used to frighten bad children; the one with the filed teeth and forked tongue; the one who uses the leather lash. We thought we could reason with Krampus. We thought we could bargain with him—step in for Santa, and in return, we would cut the chains and let him out of that ice pit. But we underestimated what years of isolation would do to an already damaged psyche. We had no idea what lengths he would go to or how hungry he had become, and we certainly had no idea that he would develop such unnatural tastes for human flesh.

So please accept our apology. We regret that your holiday lights now serve as a beacon for an unwelcome visitation. We regret that you must now keep your windows and chimneys boarded up. We regret that you must keep your children and pets locked inside basements, attics, and bomb shelters.

As a token of our regret, please accept these toys. You will note that they possess the likeness of Rudolph, and before you judge them as inappropriate please keep in mind that our normal production has declined and that we already had these in overstock. Also note that we’ve disabled the device that lights its nose. Should you notice that your Rudolph nose does in fact work, please collect your children, and leave the room immediately. Please wait at least twenty-four hours before re-entering. Just do not contact us to return the toy. Contacting us could jeopardize your safety. And, until further notice, please also ask your children to stop writing Santa. Krampus, you see, reads all the mail now, and we continue to receive many letters, most of them testimonies to good behavior. A disturbing number, however, show signs of coercion, as if parents insisted that their children write confessions, admissions of their many transgressions.

Even more disturbing, these confessions most often come with travel directions.

Doug Ford has taught for the past five years at the State College of Florida.  His previous work has appeared in various fiction magazines and web sites.  He will continue writing until those pesky little voices inside his head finally stop.

Velvet Arms

by Felix Rizk

On those cloudless nights,

when the moon is high,

the glow of silver

streaming softly to touch.

To view come

a brighter beauty.

Silhouette gliding graciously,

My heart stalls, stammers, and leaps.

My chamber of gloom,

filling slowly with radiance;

squinting in retreat,

a gentle touch on my shoulder

soothing like garnet velvet.

A gentle breeze fanning,

as I stared into honest eyes.

The land, greener by far,

as the waves lapped in silence.

In velvet arms I cuddled,

wavering not, confident realm.

Forever, she whispered, forever!

Felix Rizk is a professor at the State College of Florida.  Written in 1996, this poem marks his first publication in creative writing

 

Ode to the Bubble

 

by Dawn Muentes

Happy little floater of imperfect design.

Shining your way one square at a time.

No one to change you.

No one to please.

Twisting & Turning for everyone to see.

A constant reminder of what happiness brings.

Thank You brave floater for daring to be .

POP

 

Dawn Muentes is a student at the State College of Florida.

Our Love Story

By Michelle Papini

Remember that time when I left the yellow dresser drawer open

And we found sage-scented cloves and bubbles.

Remember that time when we took the bubbles outside and blew them.

The two bubbles cuddled and danced thru the air as if they were in love.

Then they floated into the sky and popped.

Remember that time when we laid out on the grass

Watched the clouds and smoked cigarettes.

One looked like a seashell and another like a boot.

Remember that time when it got dark and we made a fire

That crackled and burned for hours.

Then I sang you a song as if I was your muse.

We shared a tangerine that made you pucker.

Michelle Papini is in her sophomore year here at the State College of Florida. She will be recieving her AA at the end of the semester and transferring to Florida Gulf Coast University in the fall to recieve her BA in Journalism/Creative Writing.  She was the fiction editor of the fall 2009 issue and hope to continue pursuing magazine production.