Nerf Guns
A collection of grey and orange Nerf guns will
not make my foster son
popular with the other kids in the neighbourhood,
his teammates at soccer.
Neither the N-Strike Elite, the Zombie Strike,
nor the Nerf Blaster he has
arranged in a meticulous circle on the living
room floor will bring a playdate
from the boys in the Kentwood neighbourhood of
Westchester, California— even
from LAUSD’s own Kentwood Elementary School with
its diverse population.
I imagine Copernicus and Galileo with their
rudimentary telescopes researching
sunspots, afraid to challenge Cardinal
Bellarmine and the Holy Scriptures
over geocentrism versus heliocentrism. I see his
young body, the darkest kid
on our street, taking a seat on the floor. He
centers himself with the grace
of a celestial body, like some astronomical
model hanging from the ceiling
of a 4th grade classroom. I fear he will soon
learn that safety won’t revolve
around him, that the things we use to protect
ourselves routinely fail. Sometimes
I wish our imaginations could do the heavy
lifting. He tells me no one can
hurt me now. I write his name into my poems, pray he never forgets he is
loved
by us, by God. When we taught him how to swim, I
wondered who could
ever harm this buoyant boy, the silver-blue water washing over him like stars.
Bea
Arthur’s Stare
for the
rumoured twenty-three seconds,
in Mame
at the Winter Garden on Broadway,
toward Bosom
Buddy Angela Lansbury
for
describing her character’s age as somewhere
between
forty— and death
is really
nothing compared to the daggers
my mother
& her sisters exchange
some days
at the Olio Restaurant & Bar
like
daughters of Zeus not discussing art but
brands
& shades— of hair dye.
Study
the masters,
Lucille Clifton tells us. How
I’ve
studied her & Tretheway & Laux,
watching
their labour, inviting the craft to sing
in me.
Also, I study my mother & her sisters,
— but run
from them
unlike
Kwame Dawes’ approach to poetry. I
run to
it, he explains to
us in a workshop. When
Beverly
asks for an honest answer Dawny,
Debbie,
& Jeannie after too much Riesling,
is my hair a shade too blonde—
Dave
upon visiting my father-in-law at his assisted living facility
You looked tennis club today—
court soft, smoothed comb, iced Diet
Coke hellos
But later court room returned— trial’s golden child
radiating. Lexus full of purpose,
free hotel coffee on the bench seats,
legal pads on the dashboard,
corgi hair in the back,
a laminated saint— altar boy devotion.
What is lost when memory ceases
is the power to love
the once laughter, the lately empty
talk, the longing for recognition— we all want
closeness, but
distance
wants us more.
Try, our conscience whispers. Call,
you trembling children. You drops of frozen rain.
Lost and lamenting Icarus’
waxy water. Hurricanes appear too often
which is why the coastal soul is steel. Wildfires protest,
but temperate days make new mazes green,
feathery, yarn-strewn. An extended hand.
Build
wings from the candle drip. Step
into
the primal cold.
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