All My Yesterdays
I found a photo album the other day, its cracked black
leather holding pictures of a time and place I used to inhabit,
Inside were the smiling faces of relations long gone:
My parents, my aunts and uncles, my grandparents, and even
the great-grandparents I visited in Astoria before we moved.
They appear youthful and smiling, as they sometimes are in
my memories.
They always smiled for the camera even if at other times,
their faces contorted with annoyance, impatience or rage.
But here, within these pages, time is frozen, the instant of
happiness an eternal now.
Here's one of me in my carriage, dark eyes drinking in the
visible world.
It is both me and not me.
Here’s one of my mother holding me close, her check pressed
against mine. Although she appears happy, surrounding me with protective love,
she was less so in real life.
Say “cheese”!
Here I am at the Jersey shore, alongside my brother and
mother, holding the rope line where the waves break.
The camera captures me with my mouth wide open, the cold sea
spray rushing around my knees, my bathing suit hanging off one shoulder,
exposing one childish nipple.
Here is my older brother. He is dressed in shorts and
sneakers, holding a ball and glove awkwardly. It is summer and we stand
together in another photo, holding hands, as we were told to, the wind blowing
his shirt, my sundress and my hair.
I never remember him this way.
In this one, we play in the sand alongside my father. We are
both somewhat shy, I think. At least we look self-conscious.
I remember some of these moments vividly. Others are only a
whisper, a texture or the smell of the ocean.
Here are my grandparents! I sit with them at the small
kitchen table in the walk-up apartment.
“Walk on your toes,” my father would say, taking the steps
two at a time, “we don't want to disturb the other tenants. And so, we did: one
flight, then two, one more and we're there.
There are no photos of that staircase, but I remember every
polished wooden step.
Here's a photo of my aunt, my mother's older sister and my
grandmother's favorite. My mother knows this, has always known this, and
despite the smiles they wear, the undercurrent of jealousies runs deep.
My aunt lived around the corner from us in Astoria until
both families moved to Long Island. Rocky Point was their home, originally a
log cabin built before indoor plumbing was a requirement. In these photos, it
is nestled among ancient trees near the Long Island Sound.
We trekked to the outhouse with a flashlight, hearing
crickets and seeing spiders, fearful of being alone in the darkness.
Here I stand at the top of the wooden stairs that took us
down to the water's edge. The stairs seemed endless but the cool, inviting
waters kept my small legs moving
Down, down, down to the rocky shore.
Pebbles, rocks and boulders of all shapes and sizes brought
us closer to the shimmering small breakers. The photos can't capture them as
they really were: a million cameos ranging in color from white to peach to
mottled brown.
In this photo, I stand outside my father's childhood home.
It is Easter Sunday. I am visibly uncomfortable from my expression. My coat
seems ill-fitted and my broad hat sits awkwardly on my head.
Page after page, I watch myself and my family growing older.
It is overwhelming, so much more than I can absorb.
So many memories! So many years gone by. Tiny tiles of a
larger mosaic, or tiny threads assembled, a tapestry of many interwoven lives.
Where are you
When moments sweet and tender
Spring forth and beg to be remembered?
When the laughter of carefree bygone days
Echoes unbridled and exuberant
A reminder that life was once boundless joy and adventure
Where are you when the storm clouds rumble,
Harbingers of the heaven’s display of lightning flashes and
tumultuous thunder?
Do you crawl inside yourself shivering in fear
Or face the howling winds, eyes filled with excitement, hair
blowing?
Where are you when a whiff of perfume takes you back to your
grandmother’s bedroom
When you breathed in the cologne on her dresser
Or when the aroma of an ethnic dish transports you to the
kitchen
Where the meat simmered on the stove while your mother and
aunt
Peeled carrots and potatoes and you and your grandmother
snapped beans?
Do you grow wistful, wondering where those days have gone?
Brief and ordinary, unremarkable and yet
Bittersweet memories you’ll never forget.
There is an echo in the blood,
Remnants of those who came before,
Experiences and passions
Passed from mother to daughter to daughter,
Rippling, though remote, filtered by time,
Expanded in each new birth.
Knowledge embeds itself in those tiny cells, shared in the
womb,
Red stained with experiences,
Pulse beats circulating, flowing,
Remembrances recorded,
Resonating through every breath and heartbeat.
We call it intuition: a feeling sharp and sudden.
Sensing things unseen, unspoken,
Understanding without hesitation
That silent siren setting our senses alert,
Moving us to call, to act, to reach out:
The echo of experience, passed through our mothers’ blood,
A gift inscrutable and unending.
She swims through the currents of air
Hair floating behind her
Like a deep sea mermaid
Finding the currents that thrust her high above the
rooftops,
Threading the way through forests,
Smooth silver lakes, like the wide-open eyes of the earth
Watch her
Her skirts billowing behind her, like the clouds she climbs.
Sun-kissed, loosed from gravity’s tenuous hold
Girlishly giggling at all she sees,
She extends her arms
Pushing the air behind her
Until it thins and grows colder
Revealing the blue blackness
As stars too numerous to count twinkle and beckon
Trembling, she teeters on the edge of all that tethers her
To her life below the clouds
Her father’s face appears
To tell her the choice is hers to make
She can leave the business unfinished
She can escape from care and woe.
She sways momentarily caught by the currents of eternity
And makes her choice.
Grief is the suffocating air on a humid day
Sodden and oppressive
Every breath labouring,
Clinging to every pore,
Weighing on every muscle.
Grief is the thickening fog after a storm,
Disorienting and blinding,
The pathway shrouded, making our steps tentative,
Arms outstretched, groping for stability:
Staggering toward a future filled with echoes
Of stilled voices and haunting smiles
Fading like willow-wisps.
Grief is a gale force wind, whipping wildly against our
citadel
Threatening to tear the roof off,
Battering the windows until they shatter,
Bringing us to our knees as surely as an uppercut to the
jaw.
Grief is a flash flood, a river overflowing its banks,
Sweeping away everything
Churning up mud and toppling even the mightiest oak.
Grief is the shrapnel of an exploded bomb,
Penetrating the body and scarring the soul,
Permanently embedded, removal impossible.
Grief is the silent scream,
The clawing animal, dragging itself
From somewhere deep within the heart’s core
Burrowing, settling itself, an unwanted weight that must be
carried.
Kathy, your poems tell stories that touch my heart, jogging memories; some sweet, some bittersweet.
ReplyDeleteAlways a joy to read.