In the morning
After Mary Oliver
.
1.
I wake when your hand touches my arm.
It’s almost nine o’clock, you say. In case we still want to go to church.
.
2.
As I walk down the stairs, screams rise to meet me.
One teen stands staring across the room to the tv
which the screaming child is furiously fast-fowarding,
rewinding, filled with rage. Another teen stares straight ahead
and my youngest stands at the far end of the room
surrounded by ragged dog toys, looking lost.
.
3.
I hold him on the couch when the screaming is done
when my daughter has found her calm again, just for a moment.
The dog bounces up from the ground to my lap, dropping a ball
and white vomit pours from his mouth down my leg.
.
4.
That was a lot for five minutes, wasn't it? my husband asks me
on the porch where we are figuring out the day. No church.
Just a moment for silence.
.
5.
An indigenous girl, fourteen years old, found dismembered
in Arizona. What is this country I call home?
How is it still this wicked?
.
6.
My oldest son sings about our dog. Every pop song gets adapted to his name.
.
7.
There isn’t really anything else, I tell myself. It’s all bad.
But the white lilac tree is showing green buds, because
it’s false spring. “Enjoy it while it lasts!” the newspaper
gloated last week. The pointed tips of tulips, the blueberry bush
waking up, stepping stones of fungus on the plum tree trunk.
Tell me how to make it matter
more than the darkness.