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

Double-digit Cedar

Double-digit Cedar

he wants a world
where all the pieces fit
where positive and negative balance
and everything adds up
but he also does his best
to quadruple his luck
dousing himself at the spring

he surrounds himself
with cute and fuzzy
and finds new ways
to leap off windowsills
and hammock extremely
and he finds a way into
any mud puddle out there

his sweetness matches his size
and although he’s getting closer
to eye-level every day
he still comes and finds me at the spruce
still joins me under the canopy of sky
still shares his stuffy wealth with me
still is my little son
with the extra big heart

poetry

Father’s Day

Father’s Day

for maybe the first time
I felt no void this day
no sense of want or lacking

the day washed over me
a clear simple wave
celebrated with my husband
sons
father-in-law

there was a freedom
in not needing more
a peace
in feeling whole

even after the phone rang
it was so easy
to be good

poetry

resolved: not taking the blame

resolved: not taking the blame

like Siddhartha
he knows how to wait
silent and still
quiet and calm

less certain is how
he will take in
the guide’s excuse:
you moved too much

as we unmeld ourselves
from the fronds and branches
I hear his breath catch
fighting back tears

on the long silent walk home
I wonder what he will say
when he can speak freely
hoping he won’t accept the proffered blame

at home the tears come
and relief on both accounts
he knows who he is
and won’t be told otherwise

how is it at 12
he already walks away from suspect guilt
with clear eyes and a steady conscience
when I still can’t shake my Catholic days?