Cultural Show

for you
it is the word
the life
the soul

for me
an annual cultural show
actors shifting, shouting
trying to convince me

you thank me
beg me to return
perhaps i will

but no season tickets for me
no standing ovations, bravos
for words that are lost
among the shouts, the anger,
the heavy weight of guilt
for a life i love too much.

Quilt

with chunks of chicken
sticker books and melting chocolate
crinkly bags of beef jerky
mini pencils strewn like petals
crumbs in every crack
we make our way along the border

its golden sphere beckons us to stop.
we can’t go inside but see the perfect playground,
the grass soft as our new carpet,
the two-story fountain filled with children
who hear it erupt and rush
like carnivorous hawks toward fresh prey,
and i forget
(for all of ten minutes)
that i am not one of them,
but the parent
now soaked from head to toe,
dress sticking to my legs
as my three little girls
weave me in and out of spurts
in our quilt of childhood joy,
sewing up the perfect end
to a dogged day’s drive.

Bullfrogs

they have never seen
or collected one by one
bullfrogs hopping into the water
quicker than a wind shift

we pace like predators
around the pond
tiny whispered voices containing
excitement over bulging eyes

there are no mountains here
only hills so dense with trees
you’d never see the rocky bottoms
when we’re so used to rocky tops

instead horses swing reluctant tails
in air as thick and slow as syrup
and we watch a turtle slither on a log
and frog after frog hop into our hearts.

May Daughters (2011)

Riona

pieces of gold in a tiny bag
you hold it up in the dusty town
mountainous peaks bearing down

you blink at her and sniff
still after all these months
unwilling to speak a word

you cut felt in imperfect squares
around the pirates’ gold coins
so proud to pretend to be a Girl Scout

you are silently sick
never a whine or complaint
just your gentle soul of acceptance.

Mythili

you clip up your heavy bangs
emulating your sister’s idea
of new beginnings

every day you’d wear the
hand-me-down dress, so proud
that someone thought of you.

your old soul comes out
as we drive eight hours home:
“I need some air.”

you stand in the middle
pushing the new tire swing both ways
knowing you’ll bring them together.

Isabella

surrounded by friends
you are the happiest child
social butterfly fluttering by

you reorganize the backseat
toy bin, anal retentive mimicker
of mama’s nit-picky ways

you read reluctantly
in your sing-song voice
Charlotte spinning her magic web

sick sister in the night
you’ve grown up over night, miss,
“I took care of it.”

The School of Selfish Parenting

it’s another event
at the school of selfish parenting
teachers with microphones
can’t control
the stream of camera-ready vultures
clogging up the aisles
standing in front of the spotlight
chatting away in ignorance
as our tiny children
march across the stage
in caps and gowns
sing their off-key serenading songs
that we will neither see nor hear
thanks to our entitled generation.

One of Seventy Thousand

Dear U2,

I am one of seventy thousand. And seventy thousand more in each of a hundred cities across the globe. Your circular stage, famous by now, lights up like a firecracker as you belt out the tunes. No one has given a second thought to sitting since you entered. We are drawn up like marionettes, arms in the air, tears in our eyes, screams caught like chilling drinks of overpriced beer in our throats. You ask us to clap along and we all have the same hands. You ask up to hold up our phones and the blackened stadium reflects your every desire, the rectangular present-day lighters swaying back and forth in a melody of communion. And the wind that forced us all to pull our hoods and caps tighter, that haunted us on our long trek here, that beat back the sounds of The Fray? You took away every last wisp of a cloud and made it disappear the moment you stepped out of the tunnel, like Moses parting the Red Sea. What is your message for us, your devoted followers, harrowed from years of longing absence, as you guide us here tonight?

I am one of seventy thousand. We are a family, and your voices our parents’ so-many-times-heard songs that we have every word memorized. You don’t need to tell us the titles, we can sing them with our eyes closed. You don’t even need the 360 screen that changes from your faces to images of Burmese imprisonment to listings of events happening right now in the world. We would still stand, clap, scream, our love as intense and committed as the thirty-four years of charity you have offered the world.

I am one of seventy thousand. I stand next to my husband who surprised me with these impossible tickets. I jump up and down every time you make your rounds, my voice tight and hoarse within an hour. When you play “Elevation” and “Beautiful Day” I grin from ear to ear, those happy days later in your bandlife, those happy days later in my life when I first heard them. When you play “One” we all sing, but I sing with tears streaming down my face, reliving my freshman year of college and circling my dorm room with that song on repeat till the floor, my feet, and my tears were worn down to desert-like hollows of pain. And “When the Streets Have No Name,” “With or Without You”? You carry me back to high school, lying on the floor of the living room, one ear to the hardwood, the rhythmic soul-searching beat and the words that tear away the pieces of my broken heart, the words that take them and fling them up into the air, sew them back together, and time after time after time, Joshua Tree one two and three, the words that save me from myself, from what I might have done. My husband? All he sees are the tears, the emotion, the me he never knew.

I am one of seventy thousand. But you are singing just for me. For the soul you saved with your music, for the movement it made in my heart, for the person I am today, with or without you.

At Fourteen

For Jim(my)

i picture you at fourteen
gangly and awkward
bottlebottomed glasses
curly close-cut locks
riding your bike across the bridge
wearing the same three outfits
all summer long
diving into the swimming pool
down the block
and playing right along
with our nine-
and eleven-year-old games

i was in love.
it didn’t matter that you were my cousin
almost six years older
and lived across the country.
you were nice to me
made me feel at home
in that strange and cavernous house
where Grandpa and Grandma
ordered KFC
and watched TV all day
instead of fixing decent food
or paying attention to us.

you rode across the
highway bicycle bridge
and entertained us every day
and carried me on the back
of your dirt bike
on our camping trip
and talked and talked and talked
like no one else in the family would.

i still remember those words
those cyclical wheels
that sent my mind spinning
and the smile you carried
through all that was dark,
the fourteen-year-old boy
who redefined family
in my little girl eyes.

April Daughters (2011)

Isabella

how could i see only darkness
when all you’ve been trying to do
is show me your shine?

in our depths we see the light
emanating in those early moments
when first you came into the world.

their voices at your imaginative nature
and stolid toddler independence
still ring true as you toddle through school.

i will try to let loose this light,
this new view of you, if you will forgive me.
perhaps i must forgive myself first.

Mythili

as usual
you seem unaware of your surroundings.
the spring wind
that tore a bite from our kite
tries to bear down on us
as we pedal home.
you pedal away behind me
spouting out your array
of fairy-tale, Barbie-doll stories,
not even noticing
the slow and heavy pace
up the never-ending hill,
the long breaths stolen from my lungs,
your world stronger than all weaknesses.

Riona

you fit perfectly
into the shirt Isabella wore at two
and into the crevice of my lap
for our daily cuddle time.
yes, you’re the baby
and though i shouldn’t baby you
it is so hard to resist
your chunky soft cheeks
your peace talking ways
your innocence fully masked
as i hold your tiny body in mine
just as i did when you really were
my little baby.

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.