Two Poems
Motherhood
I want to want this.
So, make me a blood
orange, ripe enough to peel,
pared down to the pith
by a kitchen knife, the reddened
flesh pouring into whatever
light there is—
pull me taut
as a tendon in my own
indelible sheath,
weighted curl looping
through my belly,
ache that can’t
be rubbed away.
Settle in my bones,
marrow sponged red,
every cell in me splitting
like a grape. Divide
me down to this—
muscles working
in my throat, chords
circling in oh, oh,
this O, which is neither
profane, nor worship,
merely witness to what
will come next.
I have always been
afraid of new things.
But here are my hands,
gouged with prayer,
porous bowls waiting
to be filled.
On Learning
I fell into the world
like a robin’s egg, sliding
from the nest, a blue egg
from a blue sky, falling
to the grass. Still, I cracked
in spite of it, that prickled
softness. I broke
my arm on a thatch of grass.
A patch of dirt, actually, grass
rubbed clean of its roots
from the so many feet near
the swings. The ground did not
receive me when I leapt, resisted
with a snap in my radius, a curved,
jagged line—who knew breaking
could be so photographic,
my bones white on black film,
but no matter how many times
I turned the picture, the break
did not mend—rather, it was like
a puzzle, where everything fits,
but the fault lines still bump
their ridges beneath a fingertip.
And this is the only way
we learn—pain.
A mother watching
a daughter thrust her finger
into a birthday candle
so she can learn that what
is beautiful is also cruel,
will leave her marked, though
it may not be visible, will leave
her dazed in the grass, the blue sky
refusing to meet her eyes.