the j had fallen down – behind the o and the y.
suddenly, it seemed right to leave it that way.
and just last week or the week before, i put the j away.
when you are from long island “oy” is not an uncommon response – to many things. it can span the spectrum from light-hearted to the intense, though, in reaction to the intense, you would be less likely to use the derivative and more likely to use the whole saying – oy vey!
surprise, dismay, grief, frustration, distress. all of it.
it seems like it was a particularly prescient moment for the j to fall and the oy to stand firm.
who am i to question gravity and the wisdom of corrugated galvanized metal?
*****
read DAVID’s thoughts this MERELY-A-THOUGHT MONDAY
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