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Jennifer Dixey's Shared Poems

nine things to do

walk barefoot when it's snowing outside
swim in your shoes in summer
only wear dreams if you have to

notice breakfast, even when it's not beautiful
eat the moon for dinner
go for an ice cream at 4AM

write a love letter to someone you hate
wish yourself a happy birthday
count on your fingers the number of times you've fallen
then count the number of times you've gotten up
and see if they're the same

broken

we both get up late, in foul moods:
mine, adult-sized, full of worries,
with your Dad out sick from work, sleeping
wrapped up in a blanket on the couch;
yours, child-sized, your usual anxieties
magnified by my rushing, barking orders
instead of making motherly requests

as you refuse to eat the eggs I made
because they don't taste like the ones
Dad makes, because they're too
brown, or not brown enough
and the yogurt isn't the right kind
and the toast is toast and not bread
and you wanted cereal anyway
and breakfast comes with a side of tears
because I'm not talking to you nicely

but there isn't time for that,
five minutes late already

at the front door
I show you the new shoes
that I bought for you last night on sale
for the running club you started
yesterday; you say they fit
perfect

out the door
hustle to school
arguing all the way
about who got up late
and whose fault it all is
and how it all makes us feel

finally
I deliver you, with just a quick
hug and kiss,
to your classroom
where your teacher greets you --
asks if you were just running late?
I say yes, sheepishly

you take your desk, and as I walk away
your teacher follows me
out the door, calls my name

I think: oh, oh, a reminder, don't be late
but she tells me instead
that a boy who goes
to another school in town
has died, some of the kids in your class
were his family, his friends,
and that you will hear about it,
and that you will tell me about this
and that we might have to talk about loss

and all the way home
I want to remake our morning
with softness and quiet
with understanding, even a little joy
where we can find it

and home again,
tears like your tears
finally come to my eyes
for your heart, gentle heart
that will so soon break

walking not walking

walking fast over invisible
white snow drifts is harder than
you might imagine

harder even than walking
at an even pace
through piles of invisible
red broken fall dry leaves

harder even than
walking oh so slowly
on invisible deep, soft, grey
beach sand

which is not as hard as walking
barefoot on sharp invisible pebbles
that remind you
you are not walking at all

only dreaming you are walking
fast over invisible
white snow

"First Things First"

at my son's elementary school
an entire curriculum pervades all classes
that is based on the
seven
habits
of
highly
effective
people
(children's edition)

the first habit is:
first things first

so "First things first," I dutifully
chirp to my 8-year-old boy, who
like any 8-year-old boy
does not want to do his homework
before he watches TV or plays a game

meanwhile I
ignore the dishes in the sink
and fire up my laptop to read my email
or work on my website
or write
and I wonder if he can even see
that I am truly doing
first things first?

we do not look forward

"I'm not looking forward to getting old"
my husband says, his
hair grayed impossibly,
blue eyes already betraying
the youthful fire they once held

"It's better than the alternative"
I answer him, smiling, winking,
the wrinkles around my eyes deepening,
fulfilling the promise I once made to myself
when I was, oh yes, young:
to let them bear me to my crone age
without protest
like the swift feet
of the black birds
they are known by

we do not look forward
to getting old
(we just look backward
and wonder how it happened
so very fast)
we do not look forward
to it any more than
we could look forward
to being born

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