Puncture Wound

you are the hole in my tube,
tiny as a pin prick,
a puncture wound,
not for one second
able to hold the air
i fruitlessly pump.

your removal is tedious,
leaves road remnants
and layers of unwashable dirt
on my palms and fingertips,
takes an extra set of hands
and real strength to complete.

i haven’t the strength
to discover how you ruined my day,
only the muscles to move on,
to accept that you’re now
lying on the floor of my garage,
a haunting shadow
that tries to follow me everywhere.

The Brownie List

packing my morning bag
clothes and lunch
keys and phone
extra gloves and socks
i remember the brownies
that last night
didn’t once cross my mind to make.

the coveted brownie list
will be empty today
though i know no words
no emails
will vehemently send requests.

i will know
they will know
but they will never see
the catatonic way i came home
kids playing outside
me? unable to move from the couch
to even think
about a bit of sweetness
that now i so crave for the tip of my tongue.

The Truth? Or the Scapegoat?

I should be at school. I shouldn’t have selfishly taken the bike out at 5:15 to ride thirty-four miles because I already missed a day due to weather. Instead I should have slept in a bit, gotten the girls up, taken them to school myself. But in truth, I just couldn’t face that and everything else. I needed the ride to listen to a book, to think about someone else’s problems, fake or not, worse off than me.

Instead of meandering the middle school hallways, I sign her out of the class she can’t sit still in and drive across town. We sign in and wait. I have ample time to stare at the walls: mismatched pictures in plastic, falling-apart frames, a fairy scene in one, a child’s teary face in another. A bulletin board with peeling paper posters. Walls that are scuffed and chipped. Chairs that are so worn down and bally they appear to have been donated to this office by some up-and-coming doctor twenty years ago. Behind the receptionists’ desk, four-drawer filing cabinets so overflowing they are stacked on top with excess folders. An overweight man and his two chunky children check out and discuss Medicaid co-pays for labs with the over-the-counter-hair-dyed receptionist who wears a faded set of Broncos scrubs in the middle of April.

I can’t fit this day, or the last two weeks, the last eight years, into a poem.

I could be in seventh grade social studies right now, telling students the important information they need to add to their Chinese time lines. I watch Isabella swing her legs back and forth, jump from chair to chair as frequently as the plump toddler who just walked in with her seven-year-old sister and not-more-than-twenty-two-year-old mom, and I think, Wow, I bet no one I work with would ever be caught dead in this office. And I think, I bet no one I work with has anything less than perfect children (I’ve heard all their stories of reading-by-four, good-citizenship awards, best-ever on the basketball team).

Fifteen minutes tick by. We pay our five dollar co-pay. I hand her a battered bill that looks like the mental hell I’ve put myself through over the past two weeks. When we are finally called into the office, the nurse assistant writes down in ten words all I can say at this time about my daughter. It is not enough. Nothing will ever be enough.

The PA comes in, tall and thin as a stalk of beans, questioning my motivation. “Anyone else in the family have this problem? This tends to run in the family–to be hereditary.” Of course it does. I think back to my fearful days in the classroom, my head on the desk, my nose in a book, my lips sealed for fear of punitive action from the adults surrounding me. I weakly mention that my husband got held back in second grade, that his parents never took him to a doctor.

Were they wrong, or am I?

She tells me about the forms I already knew she would give me. I get the process, I want to say. I’m a teacher. I deal with kids like this every day. But I don’t. She’s got a screaming two-month-old, a snot-faced toddler, and fifty other patients on her list. I know. I get it. I take the papers and nod, shuffle Isabella into the hall, into the car, back to school.

She asks, “If there’s something going on in my brain, are they going to take it out?” Rephrasing my explanation of why we came in here today. “No, Isabella, of course not. If they took out your brain, you would die. It controls your whole body. They might give you medicine that you have to take every day.”
“Oh, OK, I was wondering about that,” and she finishes her lunch, silent for once.

We step in her school, tiptoe to her class. She hovers in the hallway, hesitant as a kindergartner on the first day of school. But she’s in second grade, I think. She shouldn’t hesitate, she should be fine. And that’s when I realize that everything about her, every twisted way I see her in my eyes, cannot be explained from my perspective.

My perspective is that she’s been in trouble twice within five days of school. That she had a note on her report card first quarter about excessive talking. That we took away her favorite things for twelve days and she had no visceral reaction to punishment. That when she was two and a half and sitting in time out, she couldn’t sit still for two minutes. For thirty seconds. For ten. That when she was three, she couldn’t either. Or four, or five. That she has to be told ten times to do any task we ask her to do. That she won’t read a book, not because she’s incapable, but because she can’t stop moving long enough to focus. That I think she has ADHD. That I feel like a failure as a parent because my child won’t listen to me. That I have considered spanking her because nothing. Else. Works.

I clutch the forms in my hand, place them in the passenger’s seat. I could leave them there, a scapegoat that I don’t have to follow through on. Or, I could go down to the basement and unravel the trash bags full of every special item that I’ve taken that belongs to her, blaming her “illness” for her behavior. What will it be? The truth? Or the scapegoat?

I drive to my school, unable to answer.

A Star is Born

don’t hold her back
my sister tells me
knowing how her spirit was crushed
and i am twisted between
what i think is right
what i know is wrong
wondering where the manual is
knowing there isn’t one.

just like the quilt
i cross-stitched over my pregnant belly
the words
A Star is Born
she leads them on limitless adventures
hours of imaginative play
shining so brightly
that nothing i say or do
could possibly quench the light.

i just can’t be
the mother i was taught to be
and though her vibrancy
twists at strings of guilt within me
it is me
and i will have to love her
for the child she is,
the child i was never able to be.

Peaks

if i could take those peaks,
the rays of sunlight streaming,
snatch them up from my desktop pic,
from the hands that formed them

if i could have the magical hands
that shaped this imperfect world
then perhaps i could put in perspective
the shame that hovers darker than clouds,
blocks those rays from reaching my heart.

but i can’t. i’m not God, nor have the magic
that you so desire, that seeps out of her eyes
with remorse for my harsh words, her unveiling,
that sends you to bed with night two of anguish.

if i could take those peaks,
those rays of sunlight in my hands,
i would wash our sins with the elevated air,
reshape who you are in my eyes,
release the shame from both of our souls.

Ode to Wind

you can take my breath away
and keep me pedaling in your sway
but i’m not the kind who would give in
to a kick-the-butt, taunting wind.

you should know your metaphor
opening and closing every door
but really for me it’s just a ride
no matter how you try to skin my hide.

i will say that you tried your best
to strip me down and make me rest
but you’ve forgotten how strong i am
how rigorous i set my training program.

you’ll never know the miles i track
how hard i work to fight you back
how i tell myself that if i can beat you
that mountaintop will be mine to chew.

Icicles

fog creeps in
beckoning spring
with an absent snowfall
frost on the branches
we wait
i wait
new bicycle shining
under the flash
never yet on pavement
one thousand
rooftops mimic mountains
i cannot see
he tells me by 2050
too many people will live here
to sustain life
and why am i having another child

vanilla caramel cream porter
mixed with dates that match up exactly
eleven
twenty-two
eighty-nine years
my grandmother enters
and leaves this life.

it is monday
only monday
the week is fresh
new like the snow
that will creep in on cats’ paws
as we sleep
and i wonder
if my girls
who met her once
will brave the cold
the cold, the cold
and bury the seed
that brought them into this world
the seed from last century
the person who they will never know
whose words ring
like icicles on snow
we wait for all night.

Beauty

beauty is measured in miles
time spent spinning tires
shifting gears and minds
muscles as tight as ropes

beauty is the gift i give today
the long-awaited gift of newness
the measurement of all the miles
behind me, all the miles i’ve yet to pedal.

Ride

how could i not see
after nearly ten years
in this house
that a four-mile pedal east
leads right into
cottonwood groves
tucked along creeks,
sweeping plains with hills
that carry me
roller-coaster style
into the wind,
and a view
on my homeward journey
contrasting the starkness
of yellow prairie
against the jagged peaks
that beckon non-natives
to call Colorado home?

how?
because i didn’t strap on
my helmet,
layer on my bike clothes,
and find the time to
chill-the-bones,
burn-the-muscles,
praise-the-beauty
ride.

Me

i don’t want to be here.
i’m good at this.
i’ve read enough
to share stories and articles
with my co-teachers,
have taught enough
to take over their lessons on the fly,
remember her words enough
to stand at the front and teach
while simultaneously seeing students
for who they really are,
can move through classrooms
and schedules with
hauntingly smooth ease,
can grade a stack of 150
short constructed responses
before the state test is over
and still take the time
to cry a little when i see
how poor a student’s score will be

but i cannot
i cannot
take the tears out of my four-year-old’s eyes
after the rushed-morning goodbye,
the words i cannot take back,
the days
the months
the years
i cannot take back,
the me
(the mommy me)
who i fear will never be as good
as the me
who walks down these hallways.