Tag: grandmom

  • DUSTING

    DUSTING

    It’s us we dust
    not some distant rabbit fluff or forgotten flake of stranger.
    Our very mitochondria’s cast off about the sofa, table, chair
    our entire lair’s alive with microscopic leavings.
    It’s our breadcrumb trail back to time remembered or forgot.
    Small bits of days from childhood – nights of
    watching tiny satellites pass overhead-
    the miracle of travel where once only stars and comets
    flew – who knew the things to follow – cell phones, laptops
    GPS – we know more now by knowing less
    but break still in the old, weak spots.

    Cells too remain from proms missed and attended
    dried orchids hung on curtains
    hearts broken and by time mended.
    Teenage love songs, Buddy Holly, Elvis
    George and Ringo, John and Paul –
    the words, key changes, new hair styles
    we loved them all.

    Flecks too remain from tying sneakers for my son
    and knitting Kate a turquoise sweater,
    praying daily for my marriage to get better.
    Those small children now have babies of their own
    and I’m a grandmom with grey hair, cell phone, creped skin.
    The scales of aging waltz without and within
    toward a place past time and dust.

    Published in Evening Street Review, Autumn 2012.