Consciousness
Raising
Fresh
from college
I
landed the Big Job:
Conglomerate
Electric—
expense
account, car.
I
dressed for success,
like
a man, but with breasts
in
a navy blazer, starched blouse,
scarf
knotted like a tie
at
the neck.
I
drove the gray maze of freeway
crisscrossing
the basin,
selling
small electrics
to
Savons, The Broadway.
The
car was a Plymouth,
AM
radio, no air.
Volume
up, windows down
I
sped the freeways to the Bee Gees
uh
uh uh stayin’ alive, stayin’ alive.
to
minimize downtime
I
ate lunch while I drove,
foraging
my briefcase
for
Granola bars stashed
with
other vital supplies—
spare
pantyhose, tampons
and
Valium tucked under brochures
for
blow dryers.
Rushing
to make a dozen calls a day:
to
the drug store whose manager
threatened
to kill me
if
his order came late,
to
the warehouse with rats nested
in
returned toaster ovens,
to
the five-and-dime
with
armed guards
patrolling
the aisles,
back
to the office where Hustler
fold-outs
plastered the phone bank,
where
my boss drank gin
from
a flask at his desk
and
daily asked
for
a quickie in the showroom.
None
of my friends were happy
in
their new careers.
Some
went back to school,
took
women’s studies
examining
their vaginas
with
speculum and mirror.
Some
joined EST, got their shit together.
Others
left their families,
were
re-birthed or re-born.
Seventy-nine
slouched into eighty,
Reagan
elected, John Lennon dead.
No
matter how fast I drove
I
never got anywhere.
Staying
alive
became
the only job
I
could handle.
--Donna Hilbert
from
Transforming Matter PEARL Editions,
1994
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