Soul Searching

not a single soul
in this forty-person room
has guts to speak truth

sadly, nor do i
phone in hand, blog post ready
[i can’t lose her now]

you see, i’ve lost her
and the darkness in my heart?
no match on this Earth

so i won’t speak truth
i’ll sugar-coat it, smile, nod:
age brings clarity

in that clarity
drink-free, sunny fall Sunday
i die to tell all

in her card, later
she’ll see every word and cry
for all that’s lost, gained

she couldn’t find words
only pics, video, songs
everything for him

i still feel empty
she texts me later, heart burned
you’re the only one…

even her husband
didn’t know who her dad was
[i’ve known her longer]

after the speeches
seeing her, baby in arms?
the love. of my life.

she is my best friend
her loss is my loss, our loss
never hers alone

bubbles in the sky
blown from his loving, warm lips
i live her longing

not a single soul
who speaks, making him perfect
will dare speak the truth

will i dare speak it?
a shadow follows her life
dark, drinking daddy

He Swam Anyway

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.

Here to Stay

Eritrean lunch
post-war teacher offering
how blessed they make me

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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

Let Grief Live

a rainy Sunday
filled with empty prayers to god
that i can’t quite hear

imagine this life
wasted living for heaven
all to hide our grief

let grief live on earth
with our hands upon our hearts
bleeding to let go

the clouds broke evening
god did not exempt the rain
it flooded our souls

Home. Work. Life.

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

The Longest Mile

just one mile walk home
to car-shop drop-off frenzy
begin evening stress

science fair project
won’t keep quiet on my mind
leaves alleviate

no avocados?
two wheels, backpacked ride to store
guacamole dreams

oldest cycles home
begins three-shower cycle
all by six-forty

spicy tacos rest
on spicy dream-home dispute
taste still in my mouth

all ’cause he worked late
foreshadowing our future:
crap hours, low pay

sacrifice my peace
for shut-in civility?
i’d rather be poor

rich are days with him
those hours in his absence?
a chronic longing

even the girls cry
as they will with no ‘good nights’
tears don’t buy us time

the two-income trap
snagging our life with more debt
all for image, greed

just one mile walk back
where refugee students wait,
offer perspective

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Breathing Lessons

bag on, keys in hand
lights still off, door prop broken
they wait for me here

never a moment
to take a breath or a rest
once here? i breathe them

spinning hat cycle
switch styles: students, admin
teach, plan, grade, succumb

bag down, keys waiting
lights come on, i work past dark
they wait for me there

somewhere in between
i put on the mama hat
dinner, bed cuddling

i dream of yoga
breathing in, out, stretching soul
hats off, i breathe them

Meetings

wind-swept grassland hike
table-top view of city
where mountain meets home

clear creek cottonwoods
hand-crafted home brewery
where dreamers meet dreams

science fair half done
little girl pianists play
where weekend meets week

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The Count

two-month countdown starts
pre-holiday pay knifing
how will we survive?

just as we once did:
a chef, errand-free weekends
(stay-at-home dad’s gifts)

two sides make all coins:
heavy sacrifice, workload
frantic rat race gone

we could count pennies
or we could count our blessings
we will see what counts

Citations

poorly-worded goal
provided by school district
let’s confuse students

find main idea,
three facts, underlying themes
cite text evidence

even in haiku
i clarify what they can’t
why are they in charge?

come home to harsh truths:
charter school rules, union blues
paradox, my life

my new objective:
theme that saves main idea
minus the details

(life is a challenge
of unplugged net books, low pay;
cite love to survive)