My repetition poem...
Grandparents
Some little girl has four grandparents,
their wrinkled hands and double chins,
their rocking chair routines.
Some little girl has a grandmother
who bakes everything from scratch,
dips coconut balls into waxed chocolate.
Some little girl hugs her grandfather,
sits on his lap and plays with the loose
skin on his face and gullet.
Some little girl watches her grandparent’s habits,
coffee, newspaper, pencil, crossword puzzle,
water the plants, boil the oatmeal.
Some little girl sits at the dining table,
arms crossed over her chest
shaking her head, refusing the oatmeal.
Some little girl has two grandparents,
but every little girl has at least four
at one point.
Some little girl smells their dry papery skin,
their wrinkles taste of stale crackers,
their bathrooms reek of urine.
Some little girl tells her mother,
“I don’t want to go. I don’t like it there.
I don’t even know her.”
Some little girl goes to the elder home
and finds a shadow in the corner of the room,
staring with eyes made of blue stained glass.
Some little girl has ghosts who she talks to
in the night when she remembers
music, a piano being played, a distant voice.
Some little girl remembers cigarettes,
him standing on the porch underneath the eaves,
his aged body soaking in the sunset as if it were his last.
Some little girl has distant grandparents,
ones she’s never met, ones that never send a present,
a card, ones that never cared enough.
Some little girl built grandparents out of stories
that her parents tell, as if each memory
was a piece of wood to craft a leg, an arm, a face, a throat.
Some little girl has a grandmother
that does not hug, instead she gives large spaces
and words left unsaid.
Some little girl craves to curl
her heart into a fist,
to harden it like a stone.
Some little girl visits her grandmother in a funeral home,
in a mausoleum, in the casket, in the dress
that she wore to the park that one spring day.
Some little girl remembers a man
bent over his oxygen tank,
plastic mask hiding his aging face.
This is so sad but masterfully written.
ReplyDeleteespecially the 3rd to last stanza ~
ReplyDeleteSad and wonderful (I lived in the same house as my maternal grandparents almost continually from my birth to their deaths).
ReplyDeleteWell written...very remeniscent!
ReplyDelete