Cheesecake Cycle

early morning ride
 in search of a springform pan
 obstacles block route
 
 stores aren’t convenient
 when his birthday’s tomorrow
 and i just can’t wait
 
 twenty-four miles
 transforms fast to thirty-two
 in mid-morning heat
 
 Google, phone fail me
 i meander through suburbs
 Google, phone save me
 
 prairie dog hit/run
 lost glove, quick tea/chocolate swigs
 breathless arrival
 
 cold shower, dentist
 girls busy with chores, reading
 in the name of love
 
 but i got the pan
 for the best cheesecake ever
 for the man i love
 

Gladiolas

yet. the pink flowers
 beautiful bargain for me
 for the love he shares
 
 

A Wing. A Prayer.

my incompetence
 measured with twenty stray marks
 and one rude comment
 
 let us speak the truth:
 your presumption has failed us
 and i have lost faith
 
 i pedaled uphill
 for incomprehension. served
 with sarcastic sides
 
 my happy birthday:
 giving up my Saturday
 for a wing, a prayer
 
 but the bike saves me
 the cuddling girls save me
 the cheap wine saves me
 
 (how singularly
 simple English verbs can be)
 lost in translation
 
 now, my Spanglish wish:
 let my tongue thrive like my legs
 uphill pedaled dreams
 
 
 

Half Birthday Party

In the small inadequate car, I leave her. The door shuts before I can peek inside, and I chitchat with a mother like me, one from across town. Dented version of my car, parked on the wrong side of the street. The flakes barely fallen, we talk about cancelled plans, rushed grocery trips, piano lessons that neither of us can really afford.

Three hours pass in my tiny house, new orchid stretching for the blocked sun as the storm blows in. My two remaining girls curl up reading and bicker and settle for Wii stress relief while I attempt, and fail (motherhood steals this from you) to take a nap.

We gather our bags and respond to my mother’s text: Yes, we’re still bringing them. We have to get Riona anyway and Bruce wants to try out the new four-wheel-drive car in this crazy snow.

A man hovers on the porch as we arrive, my outfit transformed to fit the sleek style of the neighborhood. Silver lining, heated leather seats, I open the iron gate and walk up the concrete steps. He peers at me, cell phone in hand, sheepish, as if he’d heard me mutter to my husband, “Is that some kid’s dad waiting for the exact moment of the party ending before he rings the bell?”

Beside him, leaning against a column on this masterpiece of a house, is a bag full of knives small enough to fit in eight-year-olds’ hands. “I was the chef for the party,” he explains, as if I’d asked him. “I’m just waiting for my ride.”

“Yes, I understand,” I want to reply. “This three-thousand-foot home certainly isn’t large enough to accommodate your wait time.”

Instead I ring the doorbell and smile as if I make conversations like this every day.

“Thank you so much for allowing your daughter to come to Emily’s half birthday!” Her mother coos as I enter. She begins to gather homemade cupcakes, rice noodles, Rio’s coat. I peek. An entryway. Hardwood until there’s no forest left. A wingback chair at the head of the twelve-person dining table. A parlor, just like back in good old Victorian England. A stairway to heaven with a hand-carve handrail. And these beautiful cupcakes with multicolored frosting and a mother who can’t take the time to bake, handed over with a hand-colored chef’s hat and goody bag full of Nerds that will spill all over our new car.

“Are you moving?” I ask, having noticed the For Sale sign propped up in front. “Well, we’re thinking about it. We found our dream house! And you know, the market is great right now for sellers, so we’re seeing what will happen.” I have no response for this. If this is the shit-hole, I wonder what the dream house looks like?

We make our way across town. He speeds up because we’ve been driving a 1998 Hyundai Accent for far too long. I have the leather baking my thighs, and the girls are all spread out in three rows of candy-induced lethargy. On the city streets that take us from the south side to the north side, we see a bus angled into an intersection, having tried to brake on a hill, failed, and run over the curb. Its hazard blinkers allow cars like us to pass, and as we move through, evaluating the damage and probability of escape for the bus, I see the three passengers standing without shelter under the storm, not ten feet from where the bus is unable to reach them. Two without hoods, one with barely a coat at all, thinking this morning that the weatherman was wrong, as the winds and flakes now swirl about them and collect on their shoulders, hair… souls.

“Oh, the bus…” he moans, and me, “Oh, those people…” And I want to reach over and say, “We have three extra seats. Stop.” But I don’t, because I’m not seventeen, and he isn’t that boy, and I have three little girls. And my car is so warm and the world is so cold and I have just extracted my youngest from a HALF birthday party with a chef who can’t wait for his ride inside the house, and all I can think is, I am one of them. I am sitting in this luxury car bought with the blood sweat and tears of fourteen years, staring out into the snow that will not ruin my day. I am one of the privileged ones, whether I want to deny it because I can’t buy this house or hire this chef or host a half birthday party, I am still one of them.

We drop the girls at the grandparents and venture out to a mediocre dinner in a highly-rated bar in the posh neighborhood that we could never afford to live in. “What should we do now?” he asks, “Do you want another beer, should we go to another place?” It is 7:32 on a Saturday night. Our children are occupied until late tomorrow afternoon. The snow has let up and we have boots on anyway. “Let’s go home. Have the wine. Watch Friends.” (It’s on Netflix now).

We enter the tiny, entry-less house. Curl up on the 17% bonded leather sectional. Flip on the broken/borrowed/fixed entertainment system that sits atop the plywood desk, our first furniture purchase eighteen years back, in the small corner between the door and the insulation-less wall. I clap when The Rembrandts ask me to clap, we watch four episodes, Chandler proposes, Monica cries, and it is just like the old days, in the apartment with ants that bit our toes if we walked across the carpet, with cockroaches and heat that went crazy and borrowed furniture and everything that was then that is now.

I am not one of them. I am just lucky enough to not be one of them, to know the value of what lies beneath my thighs, to make my own damn cupcakes and have a real birthday party, not a HALF one.

These are the things I tell myself as he falls asleep beside me, wine gone. As I make my way into the next decade that stretches between when I bought the first car that I still have and the new car that makes me look at our lives in a different light, a different snowstorm, a different drive across town.

It’s a Saturday night. And we are just like we always were, curled up in a love that’s just good enough to make any house a home.

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Twelve Years a Mother

as you turn twelve,
so does my motherhood.
from those first blood-curdling moments
of after-medicine screams
from the hospital bed,
those years at home in my arms,
first sleeping so much
that i had to tap you awake to nurse,
then climbing up stairs
and on top of chairs
before your legs would let you walk,
to the burgeoning of
older sister status,
that wild child sprouting up into the world,
audaciously declaring
that the sun only spun for your circle,
to the school-aged, readaholic
lover-of-all-things-fantasy
girl of mine…

i carried you
inside my belly,
in my arms,
behind my bike,
in a backpack,
pushing a stroller,
to Spain and back,
all the time holding on
to small fingers
that have delicately developed
into a young lady’s hands,
hands i can’t quite let go of

as you turn twelve,
my motherhood turns twelve.
i can never go back
to living for myself,
to late night movies
and sleeping in on Saturdays,
to planning for a future
that would involve anything less
than thinking of what that
future will be for you

this can only happen once.
you being born the oldest.
me becoming a mother for the first time.
how lucky we are,
to share this birthday every year.

as you turn twelve,
i turn twelve years a mother.
on our birthday,
let us remember
our best gift of all:
each other.

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Jump Here

trampoline birthday
stressful yesterday now lost
to bounces of joy

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Parental Apparitions

one cannot know
if this parenting mistake
will haunt her till death

will we be haunted
thoughts of all we could have done
between joy, anger?

her eyes still singe tears
as she kisses me goodnight
but who’s forgiven?

that’s the ache of it
the dark side of parent love
no one talks about

instead, we talk on
conversations, awkward lies
their shouting echoed

how could she be twelve
i see her carry the weight
of all her sisters

on her tiny frame
our guilt mirrored back to us
weight of heaven… hell

For Mythili on her Tenth Birthday

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Miss photogenic

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DSC01043Things could have been worse. We could have been wholly unemployed, or not had a home, or lost a baby. All the same, the year you were born and the months after, our lives were in a whirlwind of stress. We were taking on too many things–finishing a master’s degree, finishing our basement, starting up a childcare business, losing a job–and we weren’t wholly prepared for your entrance into our world. We didn’t have health insurance or all the money in the world to pay a hospital for your birth. And the day I discovered you inside my womb, I was surrounded by three babies vomiting while I lay on the couch, sick myself, wondering what we were going to do.

I should have known. If I was a fortune teller, I’d preemptively strike a snapshot of your entry into the world, that curdling newborn scream as you were pulled from me into the tub into my arms as smoothly as pulling a popsicle out of its wrapper. I should have know that out of three births, yours was the only one that happened at home, as perfectly, painlessly, and quickly as I’d imagined it.

I’d made a plan: My sister would bake a chocolate cake from scratch (I’d read about this in a book written by a famous midwife). In the time it took her to sift flour, blend together cream cheese frosting, wait for the cake to cool, and perfectly frost it with her architectural expertise, you would enter the world.

When I called the midwife at three-thirty in the afternoon, she asked where Isabella was, where my husband was, where my sister and mother were. “Isabella’s in her room, Bruce is at work, my mother and sister are coming.” “Well, I still think it’s amazing that you can leave your toddler in a room by herself. Don’t have the baby until I get there!”

By the time she did, I was ready. We’d barely filled the tub, and the contractions were expanding along my spine, my belly, my abdomen. I slipped into the hot water as Grandma took Isabella to her house, as Elizabeth didn’t use the high altitude recipe and let the smell of overflowed, burnt cake batter fill the house, and my pain disappeared. Moments later, with almost no effort (after spending two hours on excruciating pain on this task with your older sister), I pushed you out.

You needed no training on how to nurse. You were a starved expert from that first moment, searching throughout that first night for milk that hadn’t quite arrived. Your eyes were open, jaundice-free, when everyone came to see you. Isabella looked perplexed (she was twenty-one months) and perhaps a bit jealous. When Grandma was holding you the next morning and you were staring up into her eyes, she said, “You have an old soul in this one. She’s been here before.” The next morning I was getting dressed, and I placed you on the middle of the bed for a moment while I left the room, your head pointed at the opposite wall. When I reentered, you turned your head to look at me, something I hadn’t seen your sister do until almost four months. I knew my mother was right: There was something different about you.

During that first year of your life, in the balancing act of young parenthood and career beginnings, Daddy lost his job. While he futilely searched for another, I finished up my master’s degree and set out on my own search, accepting the fact that I would have to give up one of the biggest dreams of my life: staying home with my kids until they were in school. The night before I started my new teaching job, I lay awake counting all the hours I’d had with you, holding you in my arms, nursing you, watching you watch your sister dart around the house… The grief of it was so heavy I couldn’t sleep, and I spent my first day in a haze of depression.

But you were home with your Daddy, better than any daycare, and before I could blink you were trailing your sister around the house and repeating every word she said with your adorable dangling modifier, “Too.” Isabella: “I want to have some milk.” Mythili: “I want to have some juice… too!” Isabella: “I want to go outside.” Mythili: “I want to go outside… too!” And so you learned to speak and walk by fourteen months, and had developed enough language to enter your imaginary world that involves nothing less than two objects of any type–pasta shells, sticks, fingers, or dolls, to create wildly fantastical stories filled with clips of language you’ve overheard from your sisters, your friends, your parents and grandparents, books you’ve read, or movies you’ve watched. Even last night, when you ultimately decided not to go to the musical with your baby sister and I, you set up camp with your doll below the piano bench, too engulfed in your current tale to wholly say goodbye.

Mythili, how has it been ten years since that whirlwind moment of your entrance into our lives? You’re turning ten today, and sometimes I feel like we have a four-year-old, wishing to hold on to the magic of childhood for as long as possible, while other moments I think I must be speaking to an adult, with your wise sayings and bits of advice, spoken in the perfect undertone of an expert in every field.

You are a decade old, and your life is just now beginning to unfold. You have proven your adaptability to the world around you, to the stress around you, in ways that most people would envy. Mama back to work and no more milk? You were my only child willing to take a bottle of formula. New baby sister? She’s cute, but I’m a bit busy playing with Isabella right now… I’ll save my play for her for later. Moving to Spain for a year? You picked up Spanish like you were born with it and made friends within the first week of school, translated for your father when I was gone, anything from how to order a coffee to what the oven repairmen were telling him. Share a room with two sisters? You set rules for who got what beds when, always making sure to make your middle child status quite clear.

Things could have been worse, that year you were born. The worst of them all would have been if you hadn’t arrived. If you hadn’t brought that painless peace to my childbearing, that sage expression that so often comes across your face. If you hadn’t become a part of our family, we wouldn’t be the family we are today.

Things could have been worse. Without you, Mythili Lucia, they would have been. Thank you for making our lives what they are: filled with laughter and wonderment, joy and honesty. Happy tenth birthday my love, my sweet, persistent, quirky, imaginative child.

Endlessly

with golden eyelashes he sleeps
after telling the Martian story
to which only Mythili would listen
black and dark makeup-less beauty
that none of us can understand,
the one who said three months back
that she’s most like me
(all i thought of were the endlessly
imaginative doll stories, and how i hated
dolls) only to realize that
my most responsible proactive middle child
had me pegged

and how can i sum up an August Friday?
it would begin with carrying
an ever-bending begonia
through three hallways
and six sets of stairs
my endlessly flamboyant classroom colleague
holding the admin parking door open
to ask
why are women so needy?
is this why i don’t like them?

before the sun has even completely
emerged from Colorado clouds

it would end with pumpkin pie
burning up my no-a/c house
and my baby’s hands weaving
bits of crust
over her apple pie dream
as expertly as she did at age three
when Thanksgiving meant more to me
than any other holiday

in the middle, with my middle child?
school posters and schedule nightmares,
the signage of every teacher,
where i walk into that school
and every capillary in my body
is pumping blood for students
i haven’t even met

a meeting, a speech that makes me
want to hug my enemy
and wish that last year
could have been mine
ours
and the end-of-day email
blasting me
in ALL CAPS
for putting my students first
even if HE WOULDN’T

Mythili, Mythili, Mythili
who was born a writer like me
a crone before her time
whose head turned towards me on day two
how could i not know
after the
twin-in-looks-forever-defiant-Izzy
and
shy-as-a-cactus-in-December Riona
how could i not see myself in her?

the pie is in the oven
and 24 people will populate
the space between an 1864 ditch
and the playground of my youth
before i can even blink
my baby has turned 8

and we will have pie.
apple. lattice top composed
by nothing-like-me Riona.
pumpkin. requested by
my twin, Mythili.
whipped cream. to spray
in mouth of endlessly-flamboyant Isabella.

tomorrow? we will party in the park,
forget that there’s no cake.
or that schedules aren’t students.
and remember how much,
how painfully much,
we love each other.

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Teacher-Mother Pie

back to old routines
information overload
do as i say, not…

day’s success stories
vary, depending on view
mine: crosses they’ll bear

now for new nightmares
first-day jitters springing up
fan fires sun’s laugh

bring on my Friday:
arrange, plan, copy, paste, bake:
teacher-mother pie

always a puzzle
time for nothing but my kids
theirs and mine: ours

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