t-shirt weather splits
for a silent snowy stroll
peace in every flake
city surprises
around every cloudy turn
wild birds await
we had our date night
but these icy, fluffy steps
are what melt my heart
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.
a guilty headache
writing, yoga abandoned
for Spanish test prayers
four-forty a.m.:
swallow last night’s leftovers
extend my commute
four ibuprofens
dawn on a two-mile walk:
sunrise on my school
early arrival
i make lesson plans and grade
till they shuffle in
solid essay work
they have surprised me again
with how i love them
early return home
to intense yoga practice
this happy hour
headache free, i’ll sleep
ready for a new sunrise
guiltless with these words
sixty-four years back
students went on strike for this
and now we lose it
how shocking to see
a city dividing now
united in hate
segregation rules
what MLK lost with shots
fired for nothing
absenteeism
shuffles in a class bully
to begin my day
meeting turned sour
by news of favorite students
choosing other schools
(but i don’t blame them
after my reception here
and structure-less rules)
lunch: a cruel email
brings sixty minutes on hold
all for eight digits
if i had those numbers
for what i should earn each day
this wouldn’t matter
dean’s accusation
ends my locked-door afternoon
loss, theft, and questions
at home, door swings wide
my baby with arms open
smile bright as birth
we draw skating paths
multicolored chalk, sunsets
stress melts into love
Modeled after “Stopping in the Woods on a Snowy Evening” by Robert Frost
Whose house this is I think I know
His wealth is in his business though
He will not see me nosing in
Or what news I’ll take when I go.
My little girls must think it odd
To stop here, so detached from God
Where money rules the heart’s desire,
To darkest greed he gives a nod.
They pull my wrists and ask to leave
And wonder why it is I grieve
The only other sound’s the truck
That brings his gold out to his sieve
The house is lovely, tall, and grand
But I will not lose where I stand:
With them I have the upper hand,
With them I have the upper hand.
before dawn, i walk
full moon of icy danger
to be there for them
classroom lit, open
first day, students new to me
i set standards high
phones, backtalk, shouting
first impression resistance
shake me to my core
after school begging
for schedule changes, fallbacks
they hate and love me
i missed my girls’ smiles
their good-morning kisses, hugs
to face this chaos?
slushy post-school walk
to their bright eyes, warm faces
lost in built-up play
then, online ranting
plagiarizing grown student
demanding grade change
why you, and not them?
the question of my moon day
please… catch me a moon
make it bright like them
shining beyond snowy morn
lighting, guiding love
new year, back to work
meetings, trainings, pointless tests
(testing our patience)
no students today
semi-empty corridors
echo their absence
new resolutions
data, observations, goals
flood the teachers’ souls
i walk my mile home
with two six packs; ignore looks
(a friend’s thank-you gift)
girls are jubilant
a day alone with daddy
bright as this sunset: