In
the Laundry Room
Prop you up in a wicker basket,
hand you a chrome
tea-ball on a chain,
sing along with
“Sugar Magnolia”
and do the diaper folding
dance.
Hand you a chrome
tea-ball on a chain,
you bobble it,
spit-shining-wet,
watch my diaper folding
dance;
the dryer
vibrates, v-vroo v-vroo.
You bobble it,
spit-shining-wet,
blue-white bubble
of mommy-milk;
the washer cycles,
gl-gloo gl-gloo,
brown eyes dancing
wide.
Blue-white bubble
of mommy-milk
grows then shrinks
on the beat.
Pecan eyes smiling
wide,
gold-flecked just
like mine
Bubbles kept time
with the beat.
Where have they
gone?
Gold-flecked, you
were mine,
my laundry room
companion—
Where have you
gone?
What props you up
now?
My laundry room
companion,
what do you bobble
and toss?
Who props you up
now?
One diagnosis,
then another
for you to bobble
and toss,
each another
bungee cord.
One psych eval,
then another
pull you into a
basket far away.
Yet another bungee
cord…
Do you sing, my
Sugar Magnolia?
Intersection
We wait for the light to change.
Cars spew
brake lights flare
drivers glare at
the still-red light.
We met here
for the first time.
We come back
to walk.
The light changes. We cross.
The trail atop the cliff
is solid on the traffic side
crumbling away
on the ocean side.
Only a few morsels today
but after a storm
raggedy chunks of cliffside
break free and tumble down
offering themselves
to be pounded
over and over
into sand
welcoming the waves
as the ocean goes on
always goes on
long after
our walk is over
long after the trail
and the traffic light
are gone.
Daddy
When
my therapist said you were a terrible father, you flared up within me and
almost cascaded out of my mouth… Most of the time now, I’m not scurrying around
looking for dimly-lit corners where I can hang out with my back to the wall.
Most of the time now, I’m not juggling sarcastic come-backs, not throwing
I’ll-get-you-first daggers, not spinning recluse spider webs around myself, not
feeling obliged to hide—to be ashamed and hide, hide my wrongness, hide the
mystery: What the hell is defective about me anyway?
Still
sometimes the fault lines crack open, strobe lights flash, and I remember you
looking at me as if you opened up a long-lost Tupperware from the back of the
fridge and saw something disgusting… And, Daddy, when you came home from work, when
you walked through the door, I had to look into the Tupperware of you: Were you
festering, slimy? Rancid? So many times I knew, I knew—I would be hit
that night—chased and hit, pounded on with your hand and your belt and your
words. Any excuse would do.
In my kitchen at midnight
I’m making myself sick
with what if and why not
and who-does-she-think-she-is.
Run through, rewind, repeat—
stuck.
Turn to put the kettle on for tea
and notice
the foghorn’s perpetual lament
and its seasonal counterpoint,
sea lions voicing their complaints.
.
The leaves of the prayer plant
are clasped in their nightly devotion,
bananas in the shallow white bowl
display just a few brown spots,
perfect for slicing into oatmeal tomorrow,
and from upstairs, snoring,
soft, then not-so-soft, then soft again.
Breathe
and breathe some more, slowly,
down and down
all the way into my feet.
Sit down.
Sip green tea blended with ginger.
Erase the tape.
Record something new.
In my kitchen at midnight
I’m making, as always,
a life.
Fault Lines
Did you put on the
kettle, Mom,
stir up a cup of Folgers
Instant,
add some nonfat
milk
and the powder
from a little pink
packet?
Did you sit at the
kitchen table
in the squeaky yellow
chair
with chrome tepee
legs,
light up a
Winston,
and shake your
head
while he pounded
me
with caustic words
and his old brown
belt
with the brass
buckle?
Did you memorize what
he said
as it slammed
through the house
so you could spit
it back in his face
later, when you told
him
it was all his
fault?
And did you
carefully note
what I said or didn’t
say
did or didn’t do
so afterwards
you could justify
telling me
it was all my
fault
too?
Cynthia Bernard is a woman in her late sixties who is finding her
voice as a poet after many years of silence. A long-time classroom teacher and
a spiritual mentor, she lives and writes on a hill overlooking the ocean, about
25 miles south of San Francisco. Her work appears in Multiplicity
Magazine, Heimat Review, The Beatnik Cowboy, The Journal of Radical Wonder,
Spillwords, Passager, The Bluebird Word, Persimmon Tree, Verse-Virtual, and
elsewhere.
I enjoyed your poems
ReplyDeleteso clear the images-like sip green tea with ginger; so hard earned the life lessons
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