Creative response to O’Hara’s “A Step Away from Them”

I was quickly interested in Frank O’Hara’s structure of “A Step Away from Them” While I am not a poet, and do not actually read much poetry, this was fun to try to imitate and I enjoyed the experience.

 

 

A STEP AWAY FROM REAL

It’s my one free hour, so I go

for a walk among the pastel-colored

houses. First, down the alley

where young mothers feed their loud

laughing kids goldfish

and popsicles, with sunhats

they protect their fair-skinned

faces from the sun, I guess. Then onto

the street where the wealthy men walk

their pampered doodles as they consume

airpods. The sun is bright, but the

trees block the rays. I look

at millions in houses. There

are kids scrolling their phones in luxury.

                                                      On

to the next street, where the houses

grow bigger than even before, and further

do dreams have to fall from up there. A

latino stands in the doorway with a

broom, sweeping an already clean porch.

A blonde glistening housewife watches: she

smiles and rubs her apron. Everything

slowly stills: it is 2:30 of

a Tuesday.

                                                      Nude in daylight is a

a numb body, as Taylor Swift would

write, as are leopard heels in hell.

I stop for a drink of water at the trail’s

entrance. The runner wives club, elite

invitation only, bend and stretch.

All puffy lipped. A lady in

sweats on such a day puts her baby

in a swing.

                                    There are several envy-colored

tourists on the loop today, which

makes it feel false with hope. First

dreams die, then whispered arguments,

then the falling apart. But is the

island as full as the world is full, of destruction?

And one has laughed and one heavily breathes,

past the marsh where even gators are in danger

and hope drowns in the sludge and

children lower crab traps,

which they’ll soon forget. I

used to think this place had better air

than there.

                                    A pace through the woods of pretty despair

and back to the house. My heart is in my

stomach, it is the island of falsities.

One Response to Creative response to O’Hara’s “A Step Away from Them”

  1. Dee Reads Poetry September 16, 2024 at 1:42 am #

    Dang Jenny! While you say you aren’t a poet, you write a mean verse.

    I like how you followed the flow of O’Hara but you put your own spin on things. I went back and forth between thinking that this was Mt. P because of that phrase, but no, it must be the peninsula because of this line, but maybe it’s James Island, but that doesn’t fit, so it must be Mt. P. By the end, I felt like maybe it didn’t matter exactly because it could have been any or all of them. And maybe that bit of universality is what O’Hara was hoping to achieve as well.

    I think that the way you kept it centered on the action was interesting. The commentary happens in your descriptions, and that’s so fitting. Isn’t the way we choose to describe a thing the most telling thing about it? Interspersed in your descriptions are the pop culture references that anchor this piece to this time, but also make it timeless, in a way. It feels like the narrator has lost her love for this place, become disenchanted. It’s a different feel from O’Hara, who seems disenchanted with society instead of the place. Still, both pieces seem to have a melancholic feel to them, a longing for something that used to be, but is no longer.

    I think you did an amazing job of capturing the essence of what O’Hara was trying to say.

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