my mother’s mother is dying slow motion.
she thinks her father’s skull is in the rock wall
outside her window, she wishes she’d
packed her scissors, she’d
rather not
say.
i asked what her mother or her
mother’s mother fed her. rumors of apricot
thumbprint cookies. i don’t recall.
i ask about the graves all swallowed
by the Paradise fire.
I’d rather not say.
she does not fit the cookie cutter
and she does not make cookies.
Al Jazeera on low volume, dead second-cousin/husband’s
jeans hanging off her hips. all women called “females”
like the flies she tracked in
the lab.
the cats collect on the patio. she shows them
saccharine kindness. Keke, Marilyn, unnamed mischief.
they look back to her, permission to stalk
the deer.
burdened by visitors, she rejects chit chat.
mosquitos smashed to pollen screens.
considers giving us things: in rations, with stipulations.
stale bread sticks for dinner. painting of a warrior on velvet.
orange pill bottles full of metal washers, pillow cases
saved for quilts.
when my mom left home at 15, her mother rathered
not to say. soon she will either die
or keep living, forever. she'd rather not
say.
my mother watches her mother.
blood pooled like smashed rose, her skin stays
the shape of the feeling before
the last.
it’s not about her, she says when i ask.
if she’s taught me anything,
everything is.
her skin stays the shape of the feeling before the last <3 love this
ReplyDeleteThe details are so lush. There are so many complicated layers of mothers.
ReplyDeleteher mother rathered ! -- & love that last stanza
ReplyDeleteAmazing. soon she will either die / or keep living, forever
ReplyDelete