Friday, June 9, 2023

LAYOVER

 

When I find myself walking through the airport,
the enormous glass walls filled with sky
and my own meager reflection, ostensibly
just another middle-aged traveler wandering lost,
I am, unbeknownst to others, suddenly
thirteen years old again, traversing that strange city
of flight alone, disregarding the instructions given
to me by the kindly airport attendant, a young woman
in a wine-colored smock and neatly-tied scarf
smelling vaguely of vanilla and lavender.
I had never flown, and found myself suddenly
on a solo endeavor, anxiously en route
to stay with my brother or sister out west --
no one had quite determined where
I would end up -- the quietly stubborn kid
enamored with music and poetry, the mysterious world
of girls from which they all seemed to emanate.
My mother, who no longer wanted the job,
would be staying where she was, taking yet another
sabbatical from her parenting career.
So, I found myself on layover, hovering between
cities, and between lives, daydreaming past
the gift shops and baggage carousels,
the lounges overflowing with beery conversation
as the Cubs struggled to pull out a win.
I suppose my mother meant to impart a lesson,
but I already knew how to leave
and not look back, knew how to get lost
in the secret rooms of self, or deep within a crowd.
Overhead, I could hear the formless voice
calling out gate numbers and departure times,
the soft-spoken warnings, as if this were all merely
a game of chance, some tickets better than
others. Who could say which was which?
I walked on, only half listening, for something
that sounded vaguely familiar, the right combination
coupled with a bit of urgency, something that
would lead me, for now, homeward.

Sunday, June 4, 2023

AN AFTERNOON IN EARLY JUNE

 

It was the day of our neighborhood fair, the street closed from one end to the other to make room for carnival rides, local food vendors, and musicians. Kids with faces painted as jungle cats or superheroes strode up and down, panting dogs lapped up the water left out for them. Someone at the coffee shop had paid in advance for the next person's order, a gesture which was quickly taken up by the next, and the next, on and on, each new customer surprised by this mild act of generosity. The cash register grew quiet, the tip jar was emptied and filled again. I like to think this small, impromptu ritual went on long after I left, their smiles and nods, the polite raising of their glasses, stranger to stranger. "Kippis!," as my daughter and I say at home, a Finnish toast I first heard as "keep us" -- as in, keep us well, keep us together, keep us close to the source of this love, whatever the name. Keep us here, savoring that first sweet sip the whole length of the day.

Friday, May 26, 2023

BREAKDOWN

 


When my mother returned from the hospital -- the place where I was born a few short years before -- came back after several rounds of what were then known as shock treatments, she didn't come back all the way. Her cool blue eyes seemed to be somewhere else, her words slower and distant, as if trailing behind her from the next room. When she would occasionally forget the names of my brother and me, or get us mixed up, I didn't understand. I wondered who this woman was, and whether the right mother had been sent home to us. She spent much of her time in bed, unread magazines and bottles of pills balanced beside her, monotonous flicker of the black-and-white TV her only window to the outside. But I liked when she played her guitar for us, when whatever had been taken from her seemed to return, at least in part, her voice becoming almost a smile. She would sing those old country hymns and children's songs, murder ballads which I later found she had changed the words to, for our sake. Even within the beauty of such music, she seemed to be saying, the world was a frightening place, violent without warning, and whatever path you chose was yours to walk, and walk alone.

Sunday, May 21, 2023

THE UMBRELLA MAN

 

The umbrella repair man in West London
will fix yours for a modest fee,
set its broken spokes upright again,
turning expertly those pin-screws
too small for ordinary hands.
He knows all about your bad luck days,
the series of calamities that brought you here --
the time the cat ran away,
or when your car wouldn't start
and you were already late for the funeral,
the morning you were nearly blown
into oncoming traffic, your hat
carried somewhere down the road,
your flimsy umbrella turned inside out
against the maddening wind.
He's here to lift your humble sail,
to repair what otherwise would have been
tossed aside, to right and steady your course,
if only in this small, ordinary way,
to send you back into the next downpour,
calm and confident, gray rain falling
hard all around you in a nearly perfect circle,
while you remain unbothered,
as though you were some kind of royalty,
as if you were hardly there at all.

FINNISH PANCAKES

 

We stand at the kitchen counter,
my young daughter and I, mixing together
the milk, flour, sugar, and eggs by hand,
and per the family recipe, we do not measure
too closely, and are careful not to over-mix.
This recipe, handed down from her great-aunts,
and much further back than that,
is more feel than science, I am reminded,
not so different than writing a poem or falling in love.
In other words, it's always the first time.
When in doubt, add more butter,
always remember who you are cooking for,
and don't be afraid of small mistakes.
We can never resist peeking into the secret realm
of the oven as it browns and bubbles up
over the rim of the pan, as if from the earth
itself, lovely in its imperfection. Moments later,
lingonberries and maple syrup dripping
from our lips, we agree that this must be the best
batch yet -- until the next, and the next.
This is sustenance, after all, but also
a kind of song, a calling back to a world
long past, before setting out into the bright
expanse of this new day.

Thursday, May 18, 2023

BLUES FOR ROBERT BLY AND HONEYBOY EDWARDS

 

Robert Bly and Honeyboy Edwards would have
understood each other well, I think.
When I saw Honeyboy, already in his 90s
by then, small and sinewy, the bones of his face
shining through, his skin polished to
an elegant sheen that only comes with age,
he was playing to a small lecture hall
at the university, and when called back
for an encore, proceeded to play the same tune
he had played two songs in. He must have
known hundreds of songs by then, dating back
to the beginning of this American century,
but he wanted us, for whatever reason, to hear
that one again -- or he was simply playing it
for his own amusement, the particular joy and beauty
of doing whatever you damn well please,
another gift granted only to those who endure.
It reminded me of Bly, reading the same line
of poetry over again, pausing, gazing up
to see if it had resonated with those in attendance.
This, too, is the blues after all -- repeating
the refrain one has just sung, letting it linger,
roll off the tongue once more, in no hurry
for the resolution that may or may not come.
There is no end to this kind of song.
When a great singer says, "Take it from the top,"
what they mean is, "Go back all the way."

Friday, May 12, 2023

THIS MUST BE THE PLACE

 

It was late in December, and you were
visiting from the coast, the thick snow falling
all around us as if in slow motion,
the tires of the car, so low to the ground,
rounding the corners in silence.
You were pointing out the streets and storefronts
you remembered, spoke of friends long since
moved away, turning down a side street
to point out the brownstone where you once lived,
its windows unusually small, its soft yellow light
seemingly from another time and place.
You put in that old cassette, fingers half frozen,
someone singing, as so many others have,
about home -- a little flat, a little off key, but familiar
enough that we remembered every word,
the way a kiss, or the touch of a hand can return
years later, as if they never had left.
How could I tell you in the stillness of that
moment -- you gazing dreamily into your past,
that this -- this very moment -- felt like home to me,
somewhere I longed to stay, if only for a while,
the breath of our words finding each other
without hurry, our jackets smelling of wet sky,
the frozen earth rising, imperceptibly,
to hold us there, before moving on again.

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