Social (In)Justice

pitiful attempt
to show the world justice
ditching the walkout

after school, they beg
for classwork i can’t explain
in four short minutes

but the ones who stayed
sit, work with me for hours
tackling learning

one interrupts us
asking where the food bank is
to feed his family

i’m taken aback
a perfect student, born here
why is he hungry?

then, the Taliban:
lost her mother in Iran
falling off a horse

social injustice
propels their failed walkout day
served up after school

a dish to take home
a harder bite to swallow
as schools save us all

La Casa de Bernarda Alba

for oppressed women
suicide is the answer
to questioned love

La Única Raza: Humanidad

with I-dare-you stance:
If Congress has a problem?
Then just pass a bill

finally some guts
i’ve been waiting six years to
meet my President

to me, they’re my kids
being ripped from mama’s arms
that’s why i hear him

please just pass a bill
bipartisan human love
to connect us all

For Mythili on her Tenth Birthday

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Miss photogenic

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DSC01043Things could have been worse. We could have been wholly unemployed, or not had a home, or lost a baby. All the same, the year you were born and the months after, our lives were in a whirlwind of stress. We were taking on too many things–finishing a master’s degree, finishing our basement, starting up a childcare business, losing a job–and we weren’t wholly prepared for your entrance into our world. We didn’t have health insurance or all the money in the world to pay a hospital for your birth. And the day I discovered you inside my womb, I was surrounded by three babies vomiting while I lay on the couch, sick myself, wondering what we were going to do.

I should have known. If I was a fortune teller, I’d preemptively strike a snapshot of your entry into the world, that curdling newborn scream as you were pulled from me into the tub into my arms as smoothly as pulling a popsicle out of its wrapper. I should have know that out of three births, yours was the only one that happened at home, as perfectly, painlessly, and quickly as I’d imagined it.

I’d made a plan: My sister would bake a chocolate cake from scratch (I’d read about this in a book written by a famous midwife). In the time it took her to sift flour, blend together cream cheese frosting, wait for the cake to cool, and perfectly frost it with her architectural expertise, you would enter the world.

When I called the midwife at three-thirty in the afternoon, she asked where Isabella was, where my husband was, where my sister and mother were. “Isabella’s in her room, Bruce is at work, my mother and sister are coming.” “Well, I still think it’s amazing that you can leave your toddler in a room by herself. Don’t have the baby until I get there!”

By the time she did, I was ready. We’d barely filled the tub, and the contractions were expanding along my spine, my belly, my abdomen. I slipped into the hot water as Grandma took Isabella to her house, as Elizabeth didn’t use the high altitude recipe and let the smell of overflowed, burnt cake batter fill the house, and my pain disappeared. Moments later, with almost no effort (after spending two hours on excruciating pain on this task with your older sister), I pushed you out.

You needed no training on how to nurse. You were a starved expert from that first moment, searching throughout that first night for milk that hadn’t quite arrived. Your eyes were open, jaundice-free, when everyone came to see you. Isabella looked perplexed (she was twenty-one months) and perhaps a bit jealous. When Grandma was holding you the next morning and you were staring up into her eyes, she said, “You have an old soul in this one. She’s been here before.” The next morning I was getting dressed, and I placed you on the middle of the bed for a moment while I left the room, your head pointed at the opposite wall. When I reentered, you turned your head to look at me, something I hadn’t seen your sister do until almost four months. I knew my mother was right: There was something different about you.

During that first year of your life, in the balancing act of young parenthood and career beginnings, Daddy lost his job. While he futilely searched for another, I finished up my master’s degree and set out on my own search, accepting the fact that I would have to give up one of the biggest dreams of my life: staying home with my kids until they were in school. The night before I started my new teaching job, I lay awake counting all the hours I’d had with you, holding you in my arms, nursing you, watching you watch your sister dart around the house… The grief of it was so heavy I couldn’t sleep, and I spent my first day in a haze of depression.

But you were home with your Daddy, better than any daycare, and before I could blink you were trailing your sister around the house and repeating every word she said with your adorable dangling modifier, “Too.” Isabella: “I want to have some milk.” Mythili: “I want to have some juice… too!” Isabella: “I want to go outside.” Mythili: “I want to go outside… too!” And so you learned to speak and walk by fourteen months, and had developed enough language to enter your imaginary world that involves nothing less than two objects of any type–pasta shells, sticks, fingers, or dolls, to create wildly fantastical stories filled with clips of language you’ve overheard from your sisters, your friends, your parents and grandparents, books you’ve read, or movies you’ve watched. Even last night, when you ultimately decided not to go to the musical with your baby sister and I, you set up camp with your doll below the piano bench, too engulfed in your current tale to wholly say goodbye.

Mythili, how has it been ten years since that whirlwind moment of your entrance into our lives? You’re turning ten today, and sometimes I feel like we have a four-year-old, wishing to hold on to the magic of childhood for as long as possible, while other moments I think I must be speaking to an adult, with your wise sayings and bits of advice, spoken in the perfect undertone of an expert in every field.

You are a decade old, and your life is just now beginning to unfold. You have proven your adaptability to the world around you, to the stress around you, in ways that most people would envy. Mama back to work and no more milk? You were my only child willing to take a bottle of formula. New baby sister? She’s cute, but I’m a bit busy playing with Isabella right now… I’ll save my play for her for later. Moving to Spain for a year? You picked up Spanish like you were born with it and made friends within the first week of school, translated for your father when I was gone, anything from how to order a coffee to what the oven repairmen were telling him. Share a room with two sisters? You set rules for who got what beds when, always making sure to make your middle child status quite clear.

Things could have been worse, that year you were born. The worst of them all would have been if you hadn’t arrived. If you hadn’t brought that painless peace to my childbearing, that sage expression that so often comes across your face. If you hadn’t become a part of our family, we wouldn’t be the family we are today.

Things could have been worse. Without you, Mythili Lucia, they would have been. Thank you for making our lives what they are: filled with laughter and wonderment, joy and honesty. Happy tenth birthday my love, my sweet, persistent, quirky, imaginative child.

Nursing

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

Halloween Hell Party

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

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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

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)

Carnival Carol

start and end with work
how ungodly my Sunday
blessings everywhere

painted face friends grin
i enjoy two thirds of joy
my kids everywhere

from Iraq, Burma
Eritrea, refugees
whose faces aren’t here

i guide them with words
never as harsh as a mom
because they’ve suffered

my girls? only joy
bestowed on Americans
with rich white privilege

no way to explain
my work-fair-filled church-less day
may God bless us all

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Sixteen Years Later

only a kind heart
could compliment this lemon
alas, it still drives

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