• Home
    • SVJ Print
    • Issue 23
    • Issue 22
    • Issue 21
    • Issue 20
    • Issue 19
    • Issue 18
    • Issue 17
    • Issue 16
    • Issue 15
    • Issue 14
    • Issue 13
    • Issue 12
    • Issue 11
    • Flash Fiction Issue
    • Issue 9
    • Issue 8
    • Issue 7
    • Issue 6
    • Issue 5
    • Issue 4
    • Issue 3
    • Issue 2
    • Issue 1
  • Dispatches
    • Kindness of Strangers by Lou Poster
    • Art Features
    • Subscribe
    • Contact Us
    • Our Staff
    • SVJ Online
    • SVJ Print
Menu

Schuylkill Valley Journal Online

  • Home
  • Submit
    • SVJ Print
  • Issues
    • Issue 23
    • Issue 22
    • Issue 21
    • Issue 20
    • Issue 19
    • Issue 18
    • Issue 17
    • Issue 16
    • Issue 15
    • Issue 14
    • Issue 13
    • Issue 12
    • Issue 11
    • Flash Fiction Issue
    • Issue 9
    • Issue 8
    • Issue 7
    • Issue 6
    • Issue 5
    • Issue 4
    • Issue 3
    • Issue 2
    • Issue 1
  • Dispatches
  • Features
    • Kindness of Strangers by Lou Poster
    • Art Features
  • About
    • Subscribe
    • Contact Us
    • Our Staff
  • Archive
    • SVJ Online
    • SVJ Print
static.jpg

Static by Kimberly Glanzman

December 15, 2020

My mom and I are watching TV, and I’m like, I don’t know, six, seven maybe? We’re in this little apartment with train tracks nearby & the trains shake us awake every three a.m. Through the grimy window I can see a row of ants or mites or something marching along the side of the building.

This is before she met my stepdad and we had anything like money.

 

It’s the 80s so the TV’s got a pair of rabbit ears and a line of static right through Murphy Brown’s eyes, and no remote. (Well, I’m the remote). We’re two peas in a pod, me and my mom, cross-legged with open books on our knees because there’s no such thing as fast-forwarding through the commercials yet. I’ve got a Sweet Valley book with a blonde girl on the cover named Elizabeth – like the Queen, or like Ms. Taylor who played the Queen. Elizabeth-in-the-book has a twin & a big brother & two parents & a split-level ranch in California; she’s basically a princess. Or an alien. I pretend my middle name is Elizabeth, which it almost was, if my mom hadn’t lost that argument too.

 

My mom’s reading a book I’m not old enough for, the cover black with a white chalk outline of a body, her feet up on the coffee table. The sitcom comes back on, and Murphy Brown stumbles around, being frazzled in her big clean house, in her jacket with the shoulder pads. My mom’s got a jacket like that; she stitched the shoulders in herself, but it’s a dark blue while Murphy’s is yellow with gold buttons.

 

My mom studies this show as though there’s going to be a test. I don’t know why. Sweet Valley, Murphy Brown – no one lives that way. For example, none of these fictional people read books. They’re always off doing things. I guess that’s the difference: when you have money, you can gas up the car and drive away, but the rest of us are stuck here, on this old brown couch in this old grey building with the bugs sweeping up and down next to the rain gutters, and we just have to make it all up.

 

Kimberly Glanzman was a finalist for the 2019 Stella Kupferberg Memorial Short Story Prize, and a 2020 Pushcart Nominee. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Sky Island Journal, Sleet Magazine, Stonecoast Review, Jet Fuel Review, Pretty Owl Poetry, Blind Corner Literary, South Dakota Review, Harpur Palate, Iron Horse Literary Review, perhappened, and Electric Lit, among others.

Tags Kimberly Glanzman, Static, tv, Murphy Brown, Sweet Valley, Sweet Valley High, The Queen, Elizabeth Taylor, 80s, California
← When I Think About My Mother by C. Cimmone Swim at Your Own Risk by Sara Dobbie →

Latest Posts

Featured
Oct 16, 2022
The Kindness of Stranger [Part Eight] by Lou Poster
Oct 16, 2022
Oct 16, 2022
Oct 10, 2022
Greg Abbott Can Go Fuck Himself by Leigh Chadwick
Oct 10, 2022
Oct 10, 2022
Oct 9, 2022
The Kindness of Strangers [Part Seven] by Lou Poster
Oct 9, 2022
Oct 9, 2022
Oct 4, 2022
SO STOP by Sean Ennis
Oct 4, 2022
Oct 4, 2022
Oct 2, 2022
The Kindness of Strangers [Part Six] by Lou Poster
Oct 2, 2022
Oct 2, 2022
Sep 26, 2022
Happy New Year by Michael McSweeney
Sep 26, 2022
Sep 26, 2022
Sep 25, 2022
The Kindness of Strangers [Part Five] by Lou Poster
Sep 25, 2022
Sep 25, 2022
Sep 19, 2022
After Fire by Amina Kayani
Sep 19, 2022
Sep 19, 2022
Sep 18, 2022
The Kindness of Strangers [Part Four] by Lou Poster
Sep 18, 2022
Sep 18, 2022
Sep 12, 2022
Crescent Wrench by Josh Boardman
Sep 12, 2022
Sep 12, 2022

Powered by Squarespace