Showing posts with label Life Cycle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Life Cycle. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 15, 2025

Weight


The reason

_we have lost track_

to run a lean life muscular slim

is that when it is time to move on

you don't need it all that girth

the weight the accumulation holding you down

because you will always have to move on

again

 

It has little to do with what you thought it did

attracting other insecure people with your absence of flesh

playing the game, of being not-you.

It has something to do with you though the actual you:

 

who would you be without the stuff

the flesh, the power you deny, all the busy

that keeps you afloat free from thinking,

That holding on is keeping you from moving on

from learning painful learning

 

Do you ever ask

 

04.15.2025

Wednesday, March 2, 2022

The Women

We look to the mothers of mothers

to hold the weight of the memory

that death and birth are locked together

in the merciless gears that grind out life.

 

This child not yet

is not an equation to be calculated

but the alchemy of spirit and courage,

the tenacity of life that endures all struggle.

 

This small fleshy seed must first survive

the war zone of a mother’s body,

Find nourishment in the midst of commotion.

 

The girl so suddenly named mother must survive

the assault of this stranger entering through her

seemingly from another world.

 

Until finally, recognition.

You see yourself cradled against your breast,

alive with the gift of contradiction.

 

3-1-2022

Monday, December 28, 2020

Bread Pudding

Silent house, oven on, 350 degrees Fahrenheit. 

 

I would normally be baking the bread pudding with Rose. Rose is at work, their last day of work, and it is almost Christmas. It’s not near enough to the holiday to bake the gingerbread cookies yet, but near enough to want something special. Too much bread in the breadbox is reason enough to make something new, and time is running out.

 

Pandemic skills. We’ve been baking more, Rose and me. It’s a surprise pleasure to be able to cook for entertainment, a surprise to me anyway. Many cannot. Socially distanced desperation snakes its way through parking lots. A pittance of canned goods at the end, to feed a family for another week. It is a marvel to me how we have escaped that fate, at least for now.

 

Years ago, just a few years, really, I baked this bread pudding recipe for about the first time, and brought it to Mom. She thrilled to it in a way I could not have predicted. There, in her standardized assisted living apartment, I had stumbled into a tripwire of some childhood memory she had never shared with me. Likely something that didn’t seem that important at the time, but suddenly seemed fresh and precious.

 

Cutting bread is always soothing. I don’t know why. Soft bread offers no resistance to the steel blade, falls into orderly patterns on the board. Ordinary bread absurdly transformed into a dish to share.

 

It has been a while since I’ve baked alone. Rose is often the inspiration in such projects, and I am just the motor. Still, we make a good team. Carrot Cake, Date Roll, Banana Muffins, Banana Bread, Apple Crisp, Lemon Pie, Lemon Bars, Cheesecake, Flan, and cookies, a few. Often a success, always a mess, we conclude with small celebrations and a quick analysis, of what to try again, and what to do better next time. I am surprised to discover that we have both acquired some skills in this area. I am surprised, too, that we have covered some ground this way -- years of my child’s now waning childhood. And that it has made us better.

 

Mix, pour, the pan scrapes the baking rack. Timer set.

 

Rose should have been at school now. It would be nearly time for them to come home for winter break, from their third year as a university student, a junior. Pandemic intervened, I was surprised to find myself grateful that they had concocted a plan to skip school for this semester, to find a job in the meantime, to live at home, and to wait out the disease a while longer.

 

In another year, we would have been opposed to, or at least wary of an interruption to their schooling. Their first job, in a rising pandemic, with skyrocketing unemployment in every industry. We thought they would discover that it’s just not that easy. But there they went, and instead, discovered they could do it. They are proving to be resilient, this one. Their creativity runs deep, it is original and daring.  

 

Rose will arrive home today, from the final day of their well-planned plan. And so today I bake. The house smells warm with a foolish medley of such sweet things. We will be a family of three for a while longer, and we will wait out this storm. ­

 

12-16-2020

Tuesday, September 6, 2016

Popcorn Belly

Popcorn flutters grow in my belly,
dance to the rhythm
of my breath, my blood, my movement;
you knock softly at first, waiting for an answer.

Soon, you will grow impatient
no longer satisfied with hearing shadows,
ever more insistent to see the world beyond.

You know without knowing,
the urgency of the journey
upon which you are about to embark.

I hold the breadth of my belly
as I feel you talking to me;
I dance to your tiny rhythm,
throw back my head, and laugh.


©1999 Donna Jo Wallace

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Poet's Note: Here's a little non-sequitur shared from the year that I was pregnant. I loved being pregnant. dw
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Monday, October 19, 2015

Soon

I could have
brought my music to your room
when I came to help with chores each week.

I would bring my fiddle soon
I thought
after I’d learned some more.

I would have brought my music
to the hospital
but it seemed awkward to jar the silence
with such joy.

Anyway, you would be home soon.

I should have dared to be heard
to know your delighted eyes
just to see that I tried.

Small comfort to improve now.
Now I look up from my song and think
hey Mom, listen to this,

and for a while I imagine
that somehow you can.

©2015 Donna Jo Wallace.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Slow Parade

Pinked and puffed to perfection,
like a pastry in a glass counter.
They did a good job with her
she looks so peaceful, comfortable

This slow parade pays respects
gathers and bows at the plastic figure
sandwiched in satin and fluff
Today we tell stories if we know them

And make up the rest.
Substitute reality settles like a fog
and makes everyone so much
more comfortable

We should share information, not platitudes.
The sermon we should hear today is
about self exams, lumps and bumps,
not sheep and shepherds.

Grief hears words that
comfort never can.

We should become angry here, today
about toxins in our water-vegetables-plastic-
livestock-cosmetics-shampoos-baby bottles
But we will not.  Not enough.

I wonder how many here,
her kin,
will die the death she died
Will I

©2010 Donna Jo Wallace.