poetry

unmasking

Photo from The Flint Journal showing masked auto workers in 1918.

unmasking

Thinking of our relatives who died from diphtheria: my grandfather’s mother Rosemary Farley Schaaf (seen in the sidebar photo here), my grandmother’s sisters Frances and Josephine Barber, and Alex’s grandmother’s siblings Ruth and Bert Waldman.

Friday they will unmask us
and what will our faces do?
twitch nervously or beam gratefully?

after two years of suspended anticipation
my hope muscles have atrophied
I’ve lost the knack for moving on, moving forward

we’ve no link with the 1918 survivors –
the year my grandfather was born,
he’d no memory of it

instead, diphtheria is the story my husband and I grew up with:
four of our grandparents’ siblings and one mother claimed
while our grandparents were still children

now we get the Tdap or DTaP shot and
our grandparents’ devastating loss feels like
something from a different world

but those 1918 flu survivors –
how did they shed their masks and re-emerge?
how did masking become unknown to us all again?

I’ve lost my bearings for judging what is safe
I don’t even know what Greek letter comes next
let alone how to recognize it hovering on the horizon

it’s like trying to judge which smoke is from California
and which is from the next block
ready to claim what’s yours

in these days
when threats are everywhere
and we’ve grown unacquainted with joy

I still can’t imagine bringing my naked face
somewhere it could calmly swallow
anything new

poetry

sitting still

sitting still

sitting with the pain of the world
I stroke Syd’s flipper
pat his back
listen
while the ocean pours out of him

it doesn’t matter so much
where our brokenness lies
where the blows came from
how they were dealt

we most need
to sit with each other’s pain
bear witness to
the immense hurt
we sometimes cannot even name
and recollect
the strong resilient beings we are
able to knit our fractured selves
back together
sometimes with even
more abiding bonds
if only we can remove
our breastplates first
and be vulnerable
together