the bedroom with the two brass bedsteads was empty
and i was all alone but not free:
there is a price to be paid
if you want to join in my captivity.
i am less neat than a folded plain white napkin
and have no trouble with solitary ways.
i come from humble origins but love food
and drink red wine on most days.
loyal to a fault i would follow you like a puppy
with my tongue touching the floor.
if you showed a serious interest in my poems
i'd sit you down, smile, and lock the door.
i'd sketch a watercolor on your skin.
i once preferred a woman with special looks
but physical qualities mean less to me
than a lady who admires her books.
it's certainly true that i'm a fool with time
and it escapes me how to watch my money
as one second it performs an act of contrition
and the next begins anew with something funny.
i want to touch and walk into the woods,
enjoy discussing events of our world's history
but there is a price to be paid
if you want to join in my captivity.
I use words to deepen my observations. All of the following works are © copyrighted. They are the intellectual property of Greg Hoover. If you or anyone you know is interested in licensing one or more written works for use in a compilation, as lyrics in a musical work, synced to video, or some other use, feel free to contact me about an arrangement. But if not, assuming you are curious and literate, simply reading for pleasure is encouraged.
Cotopaxi, Ecuador (summer 2012)
Tuesday, October 29, 2013
Monday, October 28, 2013
another hit of blow
i watched her read a poem
she said it was a letter
it wasn't until she got some nerve
that i could hear her better
she said she felt a little down
realized she had nowhere to go
there would be no exceptions
she took another hit of blow
she regarded herself as an artist
her anger had no limit
she offered me a small sum for my love
but she would have to win it
and out of courtesy to a fellow traveler
no one was at fault
it proved to be impossible to
bring her advances to a halt
i didn't want to meddle
i watched her hold a sign
it appeared the words were all misspelled
she told me it was mine
we moved to the Upper East Side
no charges could be brought
i heard her scream for rescue
at least that's what i thought
a boxer pounded with his fists
and a dog peed on her shoe
if there was money to be made
she knew this wouldn't do
i watched her out of compassion
she suffered from the start
but she sang my favorite song again
once more and with heart
she said she had a sweet affair
the man was a recluse
the more he tried to chain her up
the more that she felt loose
she said she felt a little down
realized she had no where to go
there would be no exceptions
she took another hit of blow
she said it was a letter
it wasn't until she got some nerve
that i could hear her better
she said she felt a little down
realized she had nowhere to go
there would be no exceptions
she took another hit of blow
she regarded herself as an artist
her anger had no limit
she offered me a small sum for my love
but she would have to win it
and out of courtesy to a fellow traveler
no one was at fault
it proved to be impossible to
bring her advances to a halt
i didn't want to meddle
i watched her hold a sign
it appeared the words were all misspelled
she told me it was mine
we moved to the Upper East Side
no charges could be brought
i heard her scream for rescue
at least that's what i thought
a boxer pounded with his fists
and a dog peed on her shoe
if there was money to be made
she knew this wouldn't do
i watched her out of compassion
she suffered from the start
but she sang my favorite song again
once more and with heart
she said she had a sweet affair
the man was a recluse
the more he tried to chain her up
the more that she felt loose
she said she felt a little down
realized she had no where to go
there would be no exceptions
she took another hit of blow
Sunday, October 27, 2013
but hey Donnie!
but hey Donnie!
you dug a pretty big hole
& it might have been a war hole
or a hot piece of heavy ass hole
who can know which way you tried to go?
when you thought you were a big time dime
but the candy girls thought you were sweet
they sucked up close on easy street
they rolled juicy joints on your factory floor
you told them it was nice
but hey Donnie!
they wanted you in black leather pants
you wanted an hourly romance
they wanted you to act
but hey Donnie!
you liked riding in your stretch limousine
longer than the biggest block of New Orleans
on an early Sunday morning
you could pop up without warning
posing for pictures without a point
running hustles in every joint
parties rocking with hardly a pause
your friends all dressed like Santa Claus
but hey Donnie!
so to justify fortune and fame
wearing a smile on your head
it wasn't so much what you said
hey Donnie!
you dug a pretty big hole
it might have been a war hole
or a hot piece of heavy ass hole
but hey Donnie!
not Casper the Ghost or Lonnie
not hey Jude
'cause you were always rude
a mean and miserable dude
hey Donnie!
you dug a pretty big hole
& it might have been a war hole
or a hot piece of heavy ass hole
who can know which way you tried to go?
when you thought you were a big time dime
i thought you were a waste of time
but the candy girls thought you were sweet
they sucked up close on easy street
they rolled juicy joints on your factory floor
asked for money and you gave them more
you told them it was nice
but they said you were ice
but hey Donnie!
not Casper the Ghost or Lonnie
not hey Jude
'cause you were always rude
a mean and miserable dude
they wanted you in black leather pants
you wanted an hourly romance
they wanted you to act
but you wanted them to dance
but hey Donnie!
not Casper the Ghost or Lonnie
not hey Jude
'cause you were always rude
a mean and miserable dude
you liked riding in your stretch limousine
longer than the biggest block of New Orleans
on an early Sunday morning
you could pop up without warning
posing for pictures without a point
running hustles in every joint
parties rocking with hardly a pause
your friends all dressed like Santa Claus
or Mrs. Claus
whatever the age
it was all a stage
but hey Donnie!
not Casper the Ghost or Lonnie
not hey Jude
'cause you were always rude
a mean and miserable dude
so to justify fortune and fame
you've relied on a tin-horn name
to polish the unwashed masses
and make fun of their asses
you swindle and waddle and wade:
and your reputation is made.
but hey Donnie!
not Casper the Ghost or Lonnie
not hey Jude
'cause you were always rude
a mean and miserable dude
you were a master at this game
tinsel and tickle and fame
wearing a smile on your head
it wasn't so much what you said
hey Donnie!
not Casper the Ghost or Lonnie
not hey Jude
'cause you were always rude
a mean and miserable dude
you dug a pretty big hole
it might have been a war hole
or a hot piece of heavy ass hole
but hey Donnie!
Tuesday, October 22, 2013
Rosie
she took me out to the shack
i'm never coming back
and i'm never gonna stop
i'll stay until i drop
she's a little girl called Rosie
who put a rivet in my heart
i can feel her in the morning
and i can see her in the dark
she took me out to the shed
i'll stay there til i'm dead
but i'm never gonna die
i'm too love-struck that's why
she's a little girl called Rosie
who put a rivet in my heart
i can feel her in the morning
and i can see her in the dark
she took me down to the creek
we stayed there for a week
we went swimming all alone
i had her for my own
i'm never coming back
and i'm never gonna stop
i'll stay until i drop
she's a little girl called Rosie
who put a rivet in my heart
i can feel her in the morning
and i can see her in the dark
she took me out to the shed
i'll stay there til i'm dead
but i'm never gonna die
i'm too love-struck that's why
she's a little girl called Rosie
who put a rivet in my heart
i can feel her in the morning
and i can see her in the dark
she took me down to the creek
we stayed there for a week
we went swimming all alone
i had her for my own
Monday, October 21, 2013
first names
first names
i paid dearly enough
but i must admit i liked your stuff
the smartest of the whole gang
and you wanted a ride in my Mustang
out of devotion it's a machine of perpetual motion
the first and second law
it started up quickly and broke your fall
you wanted to do what i asked you to
first names
everywhere in demand
together, with no one in command
the highway a distant road
you wanted to lighten a heavy load
the game of chance is so much less than mischievous romance
the first and second law
it started up quickly and broke your fall
you wanted to do what i asked you to
first names
and i paid dearly enough
but i must admit i liked your stuff
i paid dearly enough
but i must admit i liked your stuff
the smartest of the whole gang
and you wanted a ride in my Mustang
out of devotion it's a machine of perpetual motion
the first and second law
it started up quickly and broke your fall
you wanted to do what i asked you to
first names
everywhere in demand
together, with no one in command
the highway a distant road
you wanted to lighten a heavy load
the game of chance is so much less than mischievous romance
the first and second law
it started up quickly and broke your fall
you wanted to do what i asked you to
first names
and i paid dearly enough
but i must admit i liked your stuff
Friday, October 18, 2013
Blue Eyelids
i've never touched a woman
who wasn't a princess or a queen
and i suppose i started out very Spanish
but ended completely unseen
i once was thought to be European
another time considered perfectly Korean
with blue eyelids and drinking like a hole
i held a cigarette in each hand
and had a tattooed dove on every finger
it made me difficult to understand
these birds flew uneasily over a woman in red
her face of legendary beauty looked perfectly dead
shortly before her death, she gave me a bag of jewels
to buy a new dress
but i have to confess
i pinched her little mouth and kept the money
i bought a souvenir bayonet and jar of honey
so she sang a sad song
about all the men who done her wrong
the settling of accounts and broken jaw
she took her time and touched them all:
her lords and masters when the moon was full;
she took it in stride but i thought it cruel.
i kept a respectful distance watching from a castle tower
while her story unfolded
late into an early morning hour.
and i still remember that night:
i zig-zagging down the road aiming my light
trying to make it to the next scene
dreaming of a princess or a queen
without a royal kingdom or a spoiled child:
a woman who drove men wild.
who wasn't a princess or a queen
and i suppose i started out very Spanish
but ended completely unseen
i once was thought to be European
another time considered perfectly Korean
with blue eyelids and drinking like a hole
i held a cigarette in each hand
and had a tattooed dove on every finger
it made me difficult to understand
these birds flew uneasily over a woman in red
her face of legendary beauty looked perfectly dead
shortly before her death, she gave me a bag of jewels
to buy a new dress
but i have to confess
i pinched her little mouth and kept the money
i bought a souvenir bayonet and jar of honey
so she sang a sad song
about all the men who done her wrong
the settling of accounts and broken jaw
she took her time and touched them all:
her lords and masters when the moon was full;
she took it in stride but i thought it cruel.
i kept a respectful distance watching from a castle tower
while her story unfolded
late into an early morning hour.
and i still remember that night:
i zig-zagging down the road aiming my light
trying to make it to the next scene
dreaming of a princess or a queen
without a royal kingdom or a spoiled child:
a woman who drove men wild.
Thursday, October 17, 2013
where i came in
this is just where i came in
nose to nose and chin to chin
my feet inside these shoes and close to you
and if you want to hear more talking
let's get together and go walking
it's a special place
where we can maintain our pace
and it's still the same
if we're in full sun or steady rain
we'll have no reason to worry
and no reason to hurry
just a little hop, skip, and we're in each other's arms
sharing the tenderness of each other's charms
making out while we're making time
everything is lookling fine
this is just where i came in
my feet inside these shoes and close to you
i can tell you that this is everything i want to do
almost to the square in Heaven but not quite
but there can be no better view when you're in sight
this is just where i want to be
my feet inside these shoes and in your company
this is just where i came in
nose to nose and chin to chin
my feet inside these shoes and close to you
nose to nose and chin to chin
my feet inside these shoes and close to you
and if you want to hear more talking
let's get together and go walking
it's a special place
where we can maintain our pace
and it's still the same
if we're in full sun or steady rain
we'll have no reason to worry
and no reason to hurry
just a little hop, skip, and we're in each other's arms
sharing the tenderness of each other's charms
making out while we're making time
everything is lookling fine
this is just where i came in
my feet inside these shoes and close to you
i can tell you that this is everything i want to do
almost to the square in Heaven but not quite
but there can be no better view when you're in sight
this is just where i want to be
my feet inside these shoes and in your company
this is just where i came in
nose to nose and chin to chin
my feet inside these shoes and close to you
Monday, October 14, 2013
a 1968 Camaro
i had just bought a new car
a 1968 Camaro
when Martin Luther was shot
and Bobby Kennedy became the next to go
i heard the news reports
each evening they talked about a foreign war
they counted all the men who died
as though they were keeping score
they wrapped each soldier in a body bag
sometimes only pieces and parts
a letter was delivered to the family
guaranteed to devastate hearts
o damn, Sam, I'm in a big funk
getting higher getting sick of this shit getting drunk
kicking the can farther down the road
no, man, I can't carry this load
but my car stayed plenty mean
it roared and all four tires smoked
girls climbed in and drank cheap wine
got loose and joked
a folk singer rolling a stone
and a Beatle singing "Give Peace a Chance!"
one man said he respected women
another had his hand in her pants
and the moon shot became a long shot
while more bombs fell
i had just bought a new car
and i drove her all the way to Hell.
o damn, Sam, I'm in a big funk
getting higher getting sick of this shit getting drunk
kicking the can farther down the road
no, man, I can't carry this load
a 1968 Camaro
when Martin Luther was shot
and Bobby Kennedy became the next to go
i heard the news reports
each evening they talked about a foreign war
they counted all the men who died
as though they were keeping score
they wrapped each soldier in a body bag
sometimes only pieces and parts
a letter was delivered to the family
guaranteed to devastate hearts
o damn, Sam, I'm in a big funk
getting higher getting sick of this shit getting drunk
kicking the can farther down the road
no, man, I can't carry this load
but my car stayed plenty mean
it roared and all four tires smoked
girls climbed in and drank cheap wine
got loose and joked
a folk singer rolling a stone
and a Beatle singing "Give Peace a Chance!"
one man said he respected women
another had his hand in her pants
and the moon shot became a long shot
while more bombs fell
i had just bought a new car
and i drove her all the way to Hell.
o damn, Sam, I'm in a big funk
getting higher getting sick of this shit getting drunk
kicking the can farther down the road
no, man, I can't carry this load
Saturday, October 12, 2013
Table 4
come for me tomorrow in the bar at table 4
I'll be sipping from my whiskey glass
and waiting by the door
I'll be looking for your friendly face
the smile that lights your eyes
but I'm not waiting for a woman
who hides herself in lies
i've never liked the cheap disguise
you've worn with whos and whats and whys.
I'm reaching for the candle stick
a matchbox in my hand
the smoke making circle eights
i can never understand
rhythms from a local band
falling on my face
bright musical notes and voices
sliding by without a trace
and dancers swaying hit a beat
houselights sweep the floor
they're looking for a friendly face
to come walking in the door
but I'm waiting for tomorrow
sometime to pay my bill
the waitress whispers in my ear,
"It's clear you've had your fill."
come for me tomorrow in the bar at table 4
I'll be sipping from my whiskey glass
and waiting by the door
I'll be looking for your friendly face
the smile that lights your eyes
but I'm not waiting for a woman
who hides herself in lies
i've never liked the cheap disguise
you've worn with whos and whats and whys
I'll be sipping from my whiskey glass
and waiting by the door
I'll be looking for your friendly face
the smile that lights your eyes
but I'm not waiting for a woman
who hides herself in lies
i've never liked the cheap disguise
you've worn with whos and whats and whys.
I'm reaching for the candle stick
a matchbox in my hand
the smoke making circle eights
i can never understand
rhythms from a local band
falling on my face
bright musical notes and voices
sliding by without a trace
and dancers swaying hit a beat
houselights sweep the floor
they're looking for a friendly face
to come walking in the door
but I'm waiting for tomorrow
sometime to pay my bill
the waitress whispers in my ear,
"It's clear you've had your fill."
come for me tomorrow in the bar at table 4
I'll be sipping from my whiskey glass
and waiting by the door
I'll be looking for your friendly face
the smile that lights your eyes
but I'm not waiting for a woman
who hides herself in lies
i've never liked the cheap disguise
you've worn with whos and whats and whys
Wednesday, October 9, 2013
Two soft eyes
she played a woman with a tambourine
to all the men yet seldom seen
two eager eyes and musical mouth
she started north and headed south
took her time and drove alone
in a rented dress she called her own
sitting closely by her side
the night time lover she hoped to ride
she thumbed his book and read a page
learned that love was all the rage
memories played her face at four
caught her looking out the door
she played a woman with an appetite
for all the men to grab a bite
her give-and-take and full-page smile
started fast and stayed awhile
she played a woman with a tambourine
to all the men yet seldom seen
two eager eyes and musical mouth
she started north and headed south
took her time and drove alone
in a rented dress she called her own
to all the men yet seldom seen
two eager eyes and musical mouth
she started north and headed south
took her time and drove alone
in a rented dress she called her own
sitting closely by her side
the night time lover she hoped to ride
she thumbed his book and read a page
learned that love was all the rage
memories played her face at four
caught her looking out the door
she played a woman with an appetite
for all the men to grab a bite
her give-and-take and full-page smile
started fast and stayed awhile
she played a woman with a tambourine
to all the men yet seldom seen
two eager eyes and musical mouth
she started north and headed south
took her time and drove alone
in a rented dress she called her own
Monday, October 7, 2013
Heaven, it's a white wall
Heaven, it's a white wall,
a black satin sofa and a new football.
tossed into the mix a juggler doing primitive tricks
and a bed where I can get my kicks
far from the public square.
I find it best watching you from there.
into a coma
with a cook and maid and an Ivy League diploma,
a chauffeur and a nanny
with a sweet young fanny
on her towel near the beach,
never too far out of reach.
across the floors wild paintings of whores
pointing south to the famous exit doors
personally bought for a cheap nickle and a cent:
I've no money left for next months' rent.
It's not strange, it's the way:
there's so much confusion without a clue of what to do or say.
I've turned my pockets inside out
and found they've been filled with shades of doubt.
a broken string on a new violin,
a red guitar and shot of gin
heard 'round the world one happy night
to make a point about appetite.
Heaven, it's a white wall,
a black satin sofa and a new football.
a black satin sofa and a new football.
tossed into the mix a juggler doing primitive tricks
and a bed where I can get my kicks
far from the public square.
I find it best watching you from there.
into a coma
with a cook and maid and an Ivy League diploma,
a chauffeur and a nanny
with a sweet young fanny
on her towel near the beach,
never too far out of reach.
across the floors wild paintings of whores
pointing south to the famous exit doors
personally bought for a cheap nickle and a cent:
I've no money left for next months' rent.
It's not strange, it's the way:
there's so much confusion without a clue of what to do or say.
I've turned my pockets inside out
and found they've been filled with shades of doubt.
a broken string on a new violin,
a red guitar and shot of gin
heard 'round the world one happy night
to make a point about appetite.
Heaven, it's a white wall,
a black satin sofa and a new football.
Saturday, October 5, 2013
Chasing Ghosts: Camp Lemonnier
Anne didn't know of the camps' existence
and probably never even heard of Djibouti,
but there it was, not too far from Yemen and
close enough to Somalia for easy pickings.
As soon as Rummy completed it, he knew it
was a masterpiece, a fighting outpost fit for his daily brag.
Cheney, as savage as always,
also wanted to be where the action was.
Having outmaneuvered the CIA, he set his sights on stateless actors,
people who were about to disappear into his black hole and travel
deeper into secret black sites hidden carefully inside his black ops world.
Rummy and Dick smoked their cigars, but W wasn't old enough to join them.
They wanted to kill: to find THEM, fix THEM, and finish THEM.
In a sort of targeted killing, the killing began.
America had the best instructors in Seal Team 6 and
Delta Force and the US Army Rangers and, shh, quiet, please.
Initially, there had been some talk about interrogation, and water boarding
but that passed along with a digested supper and before nightly prayers.
The Joint Special Operations Command wanted to go further and they would.
Their clever lawyers worked up a plan to claim extreme action was within legal bounds.
Lethal drone attacks smartly flew from bases far from any American campus,
so student term papers could still be written in a sleepy atmosphere.
Anne didn't know who was piloting the planes,
but it couldn't be Captain John Yossarian, since he was a B-25 bombardier
flying from memories collected during World War II.
The cat fight between the Pentagon and the CIA continued as a small skirmish,
not liable to detract from the larger mission of giving prisoners
rectal examinations in the hope of finding weapons of mass destruction.
And body cavity checks were carried out and diapers worn
by members of the White House staff,
so they wouldn't need to urinate or defecate on themselves.
Congressional involvement? The boys figured a workaround for that:
If there's any interference, kill'em.
This inability to understand the enormous historical resonance and relevance of
our dance with death is a failure of the current generation.
Someday, there will be no one left to say "I'm sorry."
Anne didn't know it would end this way.
and probably never even heard of Djibouti,
but there it was, not too far from Yemen and
close enough to Somalia for easy pickings.
As soon as Rummy completed it, he knew it
was a masterpiece, a fighting outpost fit for his daily brag.
Cheney, as savage as always,
also wanted to be where the action was.
Having outmaneuvered the CIA, he set his sights on stateless actors,
people who were about to disappear into his black hole and travel
deeper into secret black sites hidden carefully inside his black ops world.
Rummy and Dick smoked their cigars, but W wasn't old enough to join them.
They wanted to kill: to find THEM, fix THEM, and finish THEM.
In a sort of targeted killing, the killing began.
America had the best instructors in Seal Team 6 and
Delta Force and the US Army Rangers and, shh, quiet, please.
Initially, there had been some talk about interrogation, and water boarding
but that passed along with a digested supper and before nightly prayers.
The Joint Special Operations Command wanted to go further and they would.
Their clever lawyers worked up a plan to claim extreme action was within legal bounds.
Lethal drone attacks smartly flew from bases far from any American campus,
so student term papers could still be written in a sleepy atmosphere.
Anne didn't know who was piloting the planes,
but it couldn't be Captain John Yossarian, since he was a B-25 bombardier
flying from memories collected during World War II.
The cat fight between the Pentagon and the CIA continued as a small skirmish,
not liable to detract from the larger mission of giving prisoners
rectal examinations in the hope of finding weapons of mass destruction.
And body cavity checks were carried out and diapers worn
by members of the White House staff,
so they wouldn't need to urinate or defecate on themselves.
Congressional involvement? The boys figured a workaround for that:
If there's any interference, kill'em.
This inability to understand the enormous historical resonance and relevance of
our dance with death is a failure of the current generation.
Someday, there will be no one left to say "I'm sorry."
Anne didn't know it would end this way.
Thursday, October 3, 2013
Oh, say, can you see?
yogurt and chicken soup
on the floor with an old ash tray
amid traces of faintly red saffron-at least it looked that way-
it was all too taxing for me to stay.
black on a blue background
was a word in capital letters: SURPRISE!
with great energy it appeared before my eyes
naked of everything, including momentary lies.
and a funeral taking place
nearby but i didn't say a word
i couldn't hear what it was i thought i heard.
i saw a friend but he proved to be a bird.
he gestured swimmingly
held a fancy feather with a wink
of multicolored passion mostly clothed in hues of pink.
i had been an admirer, now didn't know what to think.
the audience whistled
and rushed into another fighting song.
i thought it was a religious hymn but once again was wrong.
in the short run i couldn't stay too long.
i am a pessimist
with dozens of umbrellas by my side
in my wretched apartment is everything i try to hide:
my library book about Copernicus and an unused TV guide
on the floor with an old ash tray
amid traces of faintly red saffron-at least it looked that way-
it was all too taxing for me to stay.
black on a blue background
was a word in capital letters: SURPRISE!
with great energy it appeared before my eyes
naked of everything, including momentary lies.
and a funeral taking place
nearby but i didn't say a word
i couldn't hear what it was i thought i heard.
i saw a friend but he proved to be a bird.
he gestured swimmingly
held a fancy feather with a wink
of multicolored passion mostly clothed in hues of pink.
i had been an admirer, now didn't know what to think.
the audience whistled
and rushed into another fighting song.
i thought it was a religious hymn but once again was wrong.
in the short run i couldn't stay too long.
i am a pessimist
with dozens of umbrellas by my side
in my wretched apartment is everything i try to hide:
my library book about Copernicus and an unused TV guide
Tuesday, October 1, 2013
Picasso's Penis
Picasso imagined his penis
like an opium pipe
ready for stroking and sucking,
constantly ready to continue the quest
for his new goddess if she would promise
to swallow him like an aspirin.
for solace, he once painted a scene
as background for a famous ballet of a
massive horse head slightly smaller than his ego,
full of color with two sturdy testicles for ears.
in his studio he was the absolute master of any
situation involving female breasts, enlarging,
distorting, and playing with realism like a suckling infant
new to the sea and the sun.
once, when an idle princess asked for his autograph, he was
seized with disgust and drew her face as a black vagina.
she asked him about his idea of fashion and he said
it consisted of a bathing belle playing with beach balls inside his private cabana,
the curtain shut, her spacious mouth wonderfully open.
like an opium pipe
ready for stroking and sucking,
constantly ready to continue the quest
for his new goddess if she would promise
to swallow him like an aspirin.
for solace, he once painted a scene
as background for a famous ballet of a
massive horse head slightly smaller than his ego,
full of color with two sturdy testicles for ears.
in his studio he was the absolute master of any
situation involving female breasts, enlarging,
distorting, and playing with realism like a suckling infant
new to the sea and the sun.
once, when an idle princess asked for his autograph, he was
seized with disgust and drew her face as a black vagina.
she asked him about his idea of fashion and he said
it consisted of a bathing belle playing with beach balls inside his private cabana,
the curtain shut, her spacious mouth wonderfully open.
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Jessica in Madrid, Spring 2006

daughter is empowering herself