Monday, July 20, 2015

A Contest


I went out this morning
with the teeth of my rake
to wrestle a bit with the dormant earth.
I don’t know who won.
Certainly the pokeweed
her massive root, a living, wet vegetable
clung for her life
while the dry grasses of last summer’s weed
rolled easily into bales
right out of the garden gate
and seemed relieved to be done with the covering.
And most assuredly
The pungent humus
exhumed
let out a silent exhale
and shuddered proudly in the rawness
at the top of the pile.
Surely my arms,
burning at the shoulder
or heart
finding equanimity in the tussle and scrape
were no worse or better than the roots that crackled
with each rip
There was no anger on either of our part,
no real competition to speak of
and of reverence
I can only prostrate down so low before I am buried beneath it.

My Mother is Not a Character




Your mother
breezes down the stairs
quips that she cannot join us for pot pies
because she would have to put on underwear

a thing my mother would never say.

At sixteen
after a sensible family dinner,
I drove to my friend's townhouse
where she and her mother would be found
folded up on a patio chairs
dining on chocolate and cigarettes
the wild instability of which
I would breathe in with hungry drags

Lizzy’s mom kept cereal in the oven
had a untamed kitchen drawer
that would flop off its tracks
clumsily revealing its contents,
the most interesting to our eleven-year-old
criminal minds
were the loose Benson & Hedges strewn among the
rubber bands and packs of playing cards.

My mother’s drawers would not flop
had tidy compartments
a spot for the Chapstick
scissors labeled MOM’S

My boyfriend’s mother,
only fifteen years older than her son,
asked us how our sex was going
one day over brunch
said the words blow job
as I attempted to steadily chew my eggs

She was fantastic

I never got to wear that child’s flush of mortification
the discomfited rolling of eyes
never dug up the nude photos and loose joints
we found in the nightstand at Heather’s house.

Never argued over politics or religion or my
declarations at the table that meat, suddenly, was murder.
Never heard the confusing muffled moans
in the middle of the night
or had anything to add when morose friends showed cut marks
and called their moms bitches.

My mother is not a character
she is cool hands on a fevered forehead
fresh, ironed sheets
reading in the shade instead of rolling in the waves
dinner at six o’clock
hand sewn costumes on Halloween
merengue cakes ringed with exotic fruit

In the parking lot of a Grateful Dead show
I watched naked blonde children
spill out of an old van
and envied their little, unkempt lives
a puppy on a rope chewing at the fleas in its toes
they have no bedtimes, I considered.

A fact their therapists must now find intensely interesting.

Thursday, April 23, 2015



An Infestation

It must mean something,
these three inchworms materializing
just as we talk about  the shifts under your feet
ducking between the brambles of
oh what should I do?
and these little lime bodies
so translucent and sweet
like the uncurling sprouts from the damp soil mounds
waving little messages on my shoulders
hanging from the tips of my hair
while you wait for what I think

I believe in something I need not specify
as they bend and unbend their nymph forms like a nod

The next day the mailbox is sealed in their webbing
they dangle from the dogwoods, swaying like lanterns
the kids trap them in jars
we are dusting them from our clothes
picking them off each others’ backs
these cankerworms
biting holes in the brand new petals
spinning through some cycle of their own

but even as novelty gives way to nuisance
there is surely still an answer
in their sticky, hatching abundance.

Saturday, February 14, 2015

The Cards



















Antelope said
the lesson is do
yet she looked at me, horns down
and that reads more like this:

but first I will need a notebook,
small and spiral-bound with an arty, smart-looking cover
and naturally I should wait until the baby grows
at which point I can order a book
about doing
so that there’s no risk of doing it wrong

And already I see her white rump of warning disappear
into the foliage,
because these are not doings

These are the work of bear
finding golden sweetness in the hollow of an old tree
curling under layers of bark
digesting all that the thorny world has painted up to this point

until the first, tight buds coax him out
blinking against the white
when he will rumble to the surface
holding the answer in his hungry paw.

Thursday, September 18, 2014

On Having a Person



There was really not too much about pregnancy that made me panic the first time around.  I knew that birth would be intense and messy, that sleep-deprivation would be unimaginably hard, and that a baby would change pretty much everything.  But I’ve always been a “cross that bridge when I come to it” kind of person, and I was so ready for this that things just mostly felt right.

But one morning as I waddled down the stairs, I caught a glimpse of my empty kitchen table, and at that moment I was knocked in the chest with a giant, terrifying reality.  In one of those empty kitchen chairs, I could almost make out the shadowy shape of a grumpy teenager with messy hair slumped over a bowl of cereal.  A teenager, who, had he been real and not a figment of my overly hormonal imagination, would have smelled like dirty socks and morning breath.  I suddenly panicked.  Grabbing the banister rail to balance myself, I said to my husband, “Oh my God.  There’s going to be a person living here.  Like a roommate, only forever.”   And while he reminded me that one’s own child is different from the messy, eccentric person you randomly meet on Craig’s List, the panic would continue to rise in my chest like a frantic flutter of crows trying to get out.  This was not just a baby we were having, but whole human being. 

I am someone who likes my space, and in order to recharge from the noisy goings on of life, I require a lot of it.  I like to drink my morning coffee without talking, I screen phone calls because I often can’t muster the energy to say “hello,” and while I don’t mind being hugged, I’m not one to lean into an embrace unprompted.   

At 30, I had finally gotten out of the trafficky, congested space of Southern California, had undoubtedly married the right person, and was living in a cabin tucked among the redwoods where we read and took naps and played jazzy music on the radio.  And I was desperately ready for this next chapter, but I was also increasingly nervous about our having to share our space with this unknown person, who I was now convinced was a sullen teenage boy with poor hygiene.

But then our little girl arrived, and I was one of those annoying people who experienced nothing but euphoria, and who felt that being a mother was what I was born to do.  And as it turned out, we had birthed a very quiet, calm baby who fit quite nicely into the cozy cabin.  The noise she made was fantastic, the spaces she filled were ones that we couldn’t have even known needed to be filled.  We did not feel crowded or overwhelmed; we felt (gag) complete. 

A friend once told me that babies are born empty, and that we slowly watch them fill with all the things that make them whoever they are going to be.   I always remembered that as we watched that bald, wobbly little lump start to smile and roll, sit up, stand and join the world.

And now she’s six, and her fuzzy, rust-colored bird fluff has grown into a long tangle of beautiful orange strands that would be totally gasp-worthy if she would ever wash or brush it.  Her feet are dirty, her lean legs are spattered with scabs and bug bites, and she suddenly demands privacy with all things bathroom-related.  She is a person.  A complicated person with opinions and moods who, I realized the other morning, often sits slumped over her cereal bowl refusing to answer our “good mornings” or other attempted civil pleasantries.  Other times, she wakes up as if on some kind of amphetamine, chattering loudly, doing theatrical things with her arms as we slump over our coffee, wincing at the way her energy is rattling our brains against the insides of our skulls.  

She leaves her shoes in a pile by every entryway in our house.  She interrupts our conversations.  She gets into my sewing kit and leaves needles on the floor.  The other night, she slid off her chair and writhed around under the dining room table because she felt that we were ignoring her during dinner.  She uses way too much toilet paper, despite the many tutorials I’ve given, and she never flushes.  She leaves blobs of toothpaste in the sink.  Aside from the one college roommate who, it turned out, was sleeping with my boyfriend, my daughter is the worst roommate I’ve ever had.

I mourn those early days when all she wanted was to be pressed up against me.  She wanted to wear my shoes and carry my purse, and when she wanted to know what I was doing she’d ask thoughtfully, “Where do, Mama?”  In her eyes, I knew everything she needed to know about the world, and we spent much of our days walking quietly, pointing to birds or puddles and naming these things.  Even her moods were simple; there was no guessing when she was unhappy and why.  We were so physically and spiritually connected that we breathed the same space in the house, and I felt empty when she wasn’t in it.

So I’ve been walking around with this little sadness because she has just begun first grade and has lost a bunch of teeth, and my voice is often hard and tired when I speak to her.  We have incentive charts and exhausting discussions about consequences and we still have those goddamn shoes at the bottom of the stairs.  

 But you know what?  Sometimes we also have conversations about whether we believe in God and how people should treat each other and how sad dying is.  We listen to audio books in the car and we read Laura Ingalls Wilder before bed and imagine what our lives would be like if we had to make our own cheese.  The other day she was telling me a story and she used the phrase, “…when much to my surprise…” and I wanted to hold her against me because it was so sweet (she didn’t let me).  She still needs me to lie in the dark with her before she can go to sleep, and she still clings to the nightshirt I wore for the two years I nursed her quietly in the dark.  I am secretly hoping she takes it to college with her. 

I know that one day I will feel even more confused by her than I do now, and I will mourn these days, the ones we are having now.  I know that one day her spastic kid energy will quiet, dipping into teenage melancholy, and I will miss the way she used to use my furniture as a jungle gym (no matter how many times I’ve asked her not to) and how she’d enthusiastically asked me a million questions before 8am and how there were always costume accessories strewn about the house.  And this work I do now, of trying to match her erratic, unpredictable behavior with some sort of cause, trying to decode the complicated outbursts and manic emotional swings, will seem simple when compared with what’s to come.

One day I will have my space back, and I will be free to silently drink my coffee and read an entire newspaper.  And I know that space will feel much too large and cavernous and dolefully uncomplicated.   But right now, there is a person at my kitchen table.  She is inexplicably sullen, wildly animated, eerily articulate, maniacally joyful, exasperatingly rigid and breath-takingly beautiful.  She is a terrible roommate, (aren’t we all, really?), but as people go, she’s absolutely one of the best I’ve ever met.