Twelve Years a Mother

as you turn twelve,
so does my motherhood.
from those first blood-curdling moments
of after-medicine screams
from the hospital bed,
those years at home in my arms,
first sleeping so much
that i had to tap you awake to nurse,
then climbing up stairs
and on top of chairs
before your legs would let you walk,
to the burgeoning of
older sister status,
that wild child sprouting up into the world,
audaciously declaring
that the sun only spun for your circle,
to the school-aged, readaholic
lover-of-all-things-fantasy
girl of mine…

i carried you
inside my belly,
in my arms,
behind my bike,
in a backpack,
pushing a stroller,
to Spain and back,
all the time holding on
to small fingers
that have delicately developed
into a young lady’s hands,
hands i can’t quite let go of

as you turn twelve,
my motherhood turns twelve.
i can never go back
to living for myself,
to late night movies
and sleeping in on Saturdays,
to planning for a future
that would involve anything less
than thinking of what that
future will be for you

this can only happen once.
you being born the oldest.
me becoming a mother for the first time.
how lucky we are,
to share this birthday every year.

as you turn twelve,
i turn twelve years a mother.
on our birthday,
let us remember
our best gift of all:
each other.

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Jump Here

trampoline birthday
stressful yesterday now lost
to bounces of joy

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Parental Apparitions

one cannot know
if this parenting mistake
will haunt her till death

will we be haunted
thoughts of all we could have done
between joy, anger?

her eyes still singe tears
as she kisses me goodnight
but who’s forgiven?

that’s the ache of it
the dark side of parent love
no one talks about

instead, we talk on
conversations, awkward lies
their shouting echoed

how could she be twelve
i see her carry the weight
of all her sisters

on her tiny frame
our guilt mirrored back to us
weight of heaven… hell

Pilot

a twelve-year journey
to our perfect family car
three rows of happy

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Teacher Mother Prayer

headstand of success
to top a sunny work week
filled with teenage grins

plan for our future
money’s tight, love is tighter
let’s let loose the strings

all of my children
wrapped in a challenging pose
namaste, my soul

Signatures

twenty signed pages
girls’ college wrapped up in hope
refinance our dreams

Doors

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

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Super Sunday

icy wonderland
perfect for dolls and yoga
warm inside Sunday

wrapped up for movies
stovetop cinnamon popcorn
cuddles all around

this is what love is
the everyday joys measured
with quiet moments

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The Cyclist’s Dilemma

he will not forgive
shuns me in once warm places
i will not forget

in tears, she begs me
just get them started–i can’t–
grief bursts into halls

all papers graded
i read Spanish in silence
wait for final bell

a windy walk home
trailed by one-car dilemma
my cyclist shines

headlamp, gloves ready
January? my mistress
cycle through my stress

my peace offering:
the book he wanted to read
(he puts me on stage)

humiliate me?
i crave the Spanish smiles
he doesn’t know me

a windy ride home
cold clings to my clothes with hugs
cheeks on girls’ warm cheeks

this brief moment here
is all i’ve seen them today
my cycle spins on

Mother to Daughter

Modeled after “Mother to Son” by Langston Hughes

Well, daughter, I’ll tell you,
Life for me hasn’t been an easy download.
It’s had loading time
and viruses,
and malware warnings,
and hard drive crashes,
and places with no wifi at all—
dead.
But all the time
I’ve been surfing along,
and reaching social media,
and writing blog posts,
and saving work to Drop Box,
and sometimes going through the Google maze
where ten million links can’t answer my query.
So, girl, don’t shut down.
Don’t you give in to the start menu.
Because when you find it’s hard to wait
you know the pinwheel of death will stop spinning
And I’m still surfing,
I’m still keeping my screen on,
And life for me hasn’t been an easy download.