when winter arrives
snow makes an easy excuse
to beg for failure
three continents back
you’d have given everything
for this cold bus ride
forget the slick roads
breath visible before you
remember learning
when winter arrives
snow makes an easy excuse
to beg for failure
three continents back
you’d have given everything
for this cold bus ride
forget the slick roads
breath visible before you
remember learning
two free holidays
first one ushers in a storm
mountains disappear
skyline from here
is always magnificent
minus the whining
how influential
a video-head friend is
shuffled in with clouds
moms must compromise
perk warmth into snowy scene
where surprise awaits
no seats near the girls
overheard conversation
prettier than snow
a Vietnam vet
three decades of war photos
now he snaps for peace
how much do you charge
to bring your eye-witness view
to my refugees?
you see, there’s this book…
as all great requests begin
Inside Out and Back…
Again, he returns
to where he lost his manhood
and became a man
I don’t charge a thing:
without our youth, our schooling
the world won’t change
we make lesson plans
till the girls will wait no more
Happy Veterans’ Day
first free holiday
though nothing is ever free
let snow send us peace
i give her the news
silent tears fall down her cheeks
worse than a tantrum
eleven years old
burden of being oldest
heavy on three girls
she carries their weight
lab rat for parental tests
what should we do next?
we drive the wrong way
arrive before she knows it
i favor her now
it is not too late
to undo this, to change schools
my peace offering
again, silent tears
on her face, trapped in my throat
i can deal with it
but should you have to?
the question that i don’t ask
(but i ask myself)
i’m going to stay
i don’t want to lose my friends
and there is my proof
hours of homework
detention for lost pencils
don’t compare to friends
i drop her off, drive
dawn’s light skids across the lake
as golden leaves fall
a sight so perfect
i want to drive back, tell her
take away her tears
mine are falling now
and i must let her decide
she leads, my oldest
if money could buy
the time i lost regretting,
would i be happy?
my biggest paycheck
untouched in the nursery
unswaddled bonus
its late-night crying
ignites a hole in my soul
but babes are fragile
even when nursing
they can fuss and search for more
easily cracking
my scarred nipple skin
tearing my hope inside out
leaving me empty
safe in its blanket
i will keep my money wrapped
while i nurse my dreams
Miss, why should i read?
Movies are so much better.
You see everything.
But what you can’t see
is the imagination
that invents the world.
Without reading books
who’d have written your movies,
given light to life?
fast-paced agreement
from Arabic-spewing mom–
he sighs, won’t give in
not five minutes pass
toothless, frumpy, loving mom
begs me to help her
why does her girl fail?
is it because of the shots
she saw as a child?
or her tent life,
her journey across the sea?
but what can we do
but cry out to God
and ask him to help us live?
then i remember
yes–a book i read
Wait–were you in Kakuma?
Yes–for nineteen years
tears swallow my throat
harrowing Lost Boy story
chronic refugee
sitting before me
(brutal book’s truth seeping in)
hope swallows her whole
i wish i could share
the beauty behind pages
that connect us all
if i could show him
the open-eyed life of words
oh, how he could fly!
ironic night ends
with her heart-wrenching handshake
pages of my book
to think i once heard
babies are hard to manage
eat, shit, drink, sleep, cry?
let’s try on costumes–
fall party, field trip, grades due
count how our days go:
back-talk homework fight
second piano practice
three girls showering
second failing math??
not a word from failed teacher
guilt, failing parents
baby barely writes
always a Daddy story
spells like a Spaniard
oldest keeps me up
stressed– her chronic detention
Daddy leaves in huff
garbage disposal
fix in the house that plagues us
that we cannot sell
let me stack my plate
with conferences tomorrow
Spanish class Thursday
Halloween Friday
filled with makeup and drinking
(i need a disguise)
to hide from this life
this balancing act of love
we call parenthood
Janis Joplin hair
might as well accept it’s mine
Happy Halloween
drive to edge of earth
that’s how far money stretches
there’s never enough
space, bedrooms, hardwood
three people and all their shit
spread suburban sloth
walkability
on a scale of one to ten?
tractor crossing sign
there is no number
to measure my distaste here
size shouldn’t matter
Americans Dream
big, better phallic boasting
in the shape of homes
American Dream:
be Janis Joplin–different
don’t let it kill you
When we were young, we’d spend weekends together. In and out of feeding your pets, checking the eyes of all your animals, and making sure all the blinds were closed, he’d pop in with bits of advice.
“Did you know, Olivia, that practicing the piano just thirty minutes a day could make you an expert? Imagine if you just gave something thirty minutes a day, how much it could change your life?”
And I didn’t know then. I just knew that you had an exchange student from France and in less than a month your father taught him how to play the guitar. They’d sit out on the front porch on late summer nights, strumming away and making you wish there were another way to reach him…
Before I even really knew you, your height intimidating my tiny eighth-grade stature, he came to our class. He called on each and every one of us, and strummed along, and asked for lines, and wrote on the board, and made us the string of words that would build our first-ever creative writing Class Poem. Our first… and our last. How I remember his sweet soul, his kindness… his willingness to be there for that shy soul who stood behind her six-foot frame… the frame he gave to you, the one he shaped you with.
And I didn’t know then. All I knew was that he loved you.
Your mom told me about the dream she had of your brother’s name. How she screamed at him for coming up with such a thing… and then placed it upon him, for the sake of your father. Everything, always, was for the sake of your father.
That tall-as-a-giant, skinny-as-a-rail Panamanian frame. Your June videos standing in the Panama rain in front of his childhood home. One of twelve, he swam in that canal, knowing some of his friends had died… he swam anyway, survived, and made you. You. Strong behind the shyness, my always-there, always-and-forever loving best friend.
And I didn’t know then, that video-viewing summer. Just that you were there, home with him, and that he loved you.
His thick brown-framed glasses and record collection. The wedding invitation and picture-of-black-man my mother painted, framed with his hands in that little back-porch room, Bellas Artes. “Te amo, Ita,” his heritage shared across the generations. And that picture you put up, you smaller than the body of the guitar he strummed for your infant sleep… How he loved you.
And I knew then… on my wedding day. But it didn’t matter. The white frame on my wedding invite? A gift that would last forever. Even after he was gone.
When grief takes over, life become a series of ‘What Ifs.’ What if I had loved him more? What if I had taken him to the dentist? What if I had come one day earlier? What if he never met my mother? What if he never joined the Army? What if he never knew what it felt like to have a drink? What if I had gone alone?
It will never end. It will never, ever. Ever end.
And I knew then… that day you sent me the texts. When I called and heard your hollow voice. That it was over. That all the pain that had sloshed in his mouth and washed out his heart and that left you with your ‘What Ifs…’ I knew about the demons. About the emptiness that trails like a shadow at the back of your beautiful life. About the love that will never die, just like he would never die, because he swam anyway, and beat the Panama Canal. He swam, sang, fought, and lived for you. He swam anyway, swallowing his demons, making you the amazing woman you are today.
What if he never swam? What if he never made it to the shore?
And I knew then… He swam anyway. He swam for you.
Keep swimming, my friend. Keep swimming.
Eritrean lunch
post-war teacher offering
how blessed they make me
youngest’s six sound bites
mad, glad, hungry, scared… favorite?
Mama’s “Für Elise”
tears backstage, waiting
for a song i can’t quite play
that’s her favorite sound?
middle school yelling
another homework battle
oldest sets standards
caught in the middle
daughter two rattles school story
steals bed time cuddles
how spicy, this meal
carried across continents
homemade, just like us
homework Saturday
spun through web of fall colors
parked our playground joy
old enough to ride
and catch dreams along the way
my girls growing up
last of season cones
pumpkin pie, football flavors
as the north wind blows
still sing childhood
though the oldest’s lost in books
hope i can find her
leaves sprinkle the ground
like fire light our way home
home… life Saturday