I love the world as she has loved me –
she to me, a globule; I, to her, infinity.
She unpacks her bags each morning,
with equal fanfare, but no pretense.
_
She always was a generous friend –
a giver of pleasure,
waitress to my doubt,
bearer of my pain.
And, in her bosom? That longed for, long
home-s t r e t c h of the driver’s road.
_
Her knowing neck waits for my tears.
She sends reminders for me to
clap the dirt clods from my dusty hands
before I scratch out memories in clouds
or bend my knees to the great silence.
Toast her first, take her elder hand, look deep
inside her intuition – then ravage seems less likely.
_
“You pinch and toss, diminish and deride,
hoarding stolen jewels for your banality.
But I’ve borne you on my back,
wrapped you in my folded skin,
planted you in places
you’ve known, some not.
You’ve nursed these ancient breasts
into the submission of harmony,
the blessing of acceptance.”
_
So I come to rest in her scholarly pain.
There is a certain ennui in my small experience
that shows up when I meet her gaze.
And any of my rumpled thoughts or faces
meant as caves and shields
cannot cast shadows longer than the sum of her days.
_
I smile and we shimmy down the park bench
of years and stories told and lies perfected.
And she smiles because she knows everything
I’ve forgotten or discarded
or chosen to remember poorly.
_
I’ve bruised her.
She blesses me.
I love the world as she has loved me –
she to me, a mother; I to her, a child.