poetry

my son has no taste for paintball

my son has no taste for paintball

My son sheds his year-round shorts and short-sleeved tee
for long pants and long sleeves,
what he’s been told to wear
to lessen the sting of inevitable impacts.
Hood up, he looks the stereotypical hoodlum,
even further from his usual self.

At the end of the party my teacher husband texts
we’re never hosting something like this.
I picture the boys covered in paint,
ask if his sneakers are ruined.
No, they’re fine
he writes
but it’s a bunch of kids
in full military tactical gear
shooting at each other.

too real
too raw

He comes home
all in one piece on the outside;
inside, rattled, by more than
the way the bullets grazed skulls,
more than the sinking feeling
of pulling a trigger for the very first time.

These boys already know too much real life –
all the losses that can’t be laughed at,
the way things get so serious so fast:
fire, flood, shooting, plague.

Good times are too hard to come by
to be squandered on
taking each other out.

poetry

truce (a love poem)

truce (a love poem)

because your unbeing is possible
today in the middle of our muddle about
showers
I collapse
fall like a drop
onto your bed
and surrender
this is so dumb for us to be arguing about
I throw in the towel
and, disarmed, you agree and
we cease
to struggle
both knowing how now will be then
and not wanting to look back wistful
disappointed in ourselves and our carelessness
not wanting to squander love’s warmth
on righteousness

poetry

natural dissonance

natural dissonance

the irony isn’t lost on me
running the air purifier
and the oven self-clean cycle
simultaneously:
we all do our best
to manage our inconsistencies

in the dark
under the stars
Fennec is tense with listening
uncomfortable to be out in the wild night
but curious what’s here

inside, the boys squabble over
who can help rip out the carpet
Alex says it’s like Huck Finn
but we all breathe easier
when the orange shag’s removed

at the spring
we all look up and know
this is why we’re here

poetry

tweens

tweens

may I never forget
our boys at this age
searching the mud
for slick thick-bellied frogs
loose in their lengthening bodies
unconscious of the part of their hair
and whether anyone’s watching

poetry

a striking truth re mothering boys

a striking truth re mothering boys

after 12 years of mothering boys
I still don’t quite get it

we leave for a walk and I ask them
to leave their PVC pipes behind

let’s not whack things
let’s not be violent
let’s be quiet
and look for animals

they grumble, but do it for me
and within minutes they’re clutching
big brown blocks of icy snow
smashing them against each other

after one starts crying
I try again
let’s not beat on each other
let’s just walk
and see the world

the crying one protests,
requesting more abuse,
but we continue plodding along

until they both spy a mullein
at the same time –
a ramrod-straight perfect sword –
they both fall upon it at once

after much wrestling and wresting
they strike a deal
as to who can whack with it

I still have not learned
how much they need
to feel their own bodies
through the vibrations
of something else striking them

how their muscles need to be told
where they are in space
how they need to be sure
they exist right now
with the solid reassurance
only a good thwack will give

poetry

camping with boys

camping with boys

a blue blur flattens everything inside
the 3-meter-squared-square
I’m a steamroller
sent to flatten evil Farmer McGregor
it growls
then squirms around to roll
the perpendicular pathway
to make sure every bit of the people inside
has been paved into oblivion
Good morning, steamroller
I say, my crushed lips
luckily still able to
form a smile

poetry

Showers: Two Perspectives

Showers: Two Perspectives

water courses over my limbs
making me my own river network
braiding and unbraiding
carrying away the salt and dust and weariness
the road laid down
opening my pores
letting my eyes see without clayed corners
unmatting my hair
unclogging my nails
leaving the clean damp sheen
of a free-breathing body
until I sigh and smile

and the boys cry
don’t make me do it!