Hands

Left hand

At 16 years I knew a girl whose hands
were soft and still at rest. She seemed serene,
and she became the image I command
when I attempt to wipe my worry clean.
A year ago I started spending days
with baby Sam, whose growing antics fill
my heart, but it’s his resting hands that slay
me daily: tapered fingers, dimpled, still.

My mother ever fidgeted. She found
a thousand jobs to do and picked
her hands incessantly. She harped and frowned
when I sat still like I had some defect.
I lace my hands at rest now, palm to palm
with space between, and feel my edges calm.

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Tutorial

School_Building_21611_7[1]

I used to learn from Dad and friends and books –
instructors taught me lessons now and then –
but Dad misplaced his mind, and grown it looks
like friends have given up and don’t intend
to add to knowledge. Teachers as a rule
are mediocre or too hard to find.
I’m never ready to return to school,
and yet I harbor stamina in mind.

I chewed the best of books long years ago.
I gleaned the written wisdom of my age.
I got a lot, but of what I don’t know,
I doubt the answer’s found on any page.
Of late my mate’s a toddler, and I see
and sense with him the world’s immensity.

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Quiet Hands

Left hand

The mother was the opposite of calm.
She fidgeted with antsiness and stress,
and never showed her children either palm
except to slap or signal Stop. Unless
the mother slept, her fingers weren’t still.
She picked non-stop – her little girl’s demands
for comfort brushed aside, refused, until
she found a high school friend with quiet hands.

That daughter’s kids are parents now, and all
the babes are miracles. The latest one
has hands that make his grandmother recall
her friend, her frenzied mom. Now she’s begun
to let her hands relax when holding air.
The freight is weightless, and there’s comfort there.

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How

magnetic-alphabet-letters[1]

I wondered: what’s the etymology
of irony and iron? Do they share
a common root, or trick disparity?
I learned that they’re an unrelated pair.
They sound alike coincidentally,
and by the way, that’s not a synonym:
coincident’ly’s not ironic’ly.
I wince when they’re exchanged, and I’m not prim.

Then too, I’m lately bothered and confused
at all the stars and products called iconic.
The term’s too tall and broad and overused
to intimate the holy. It’s ironic:
the loudest call for English speaking now
proceeds from characters who don’t know how.

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All’s Well

220px-Cerebral_lobes[1]

I seldom notice when a headache ends.
It’s not so much relief as memory
forestalled; my situation recommends
another subject then. Antipathy
commands I sense annoyances and threat –
no satisfaction builds a stronger urge.
But goodness I am likely to forget
(I fail to note a graceful traffic merge).

Today I stretch with ease and lift this pen,
recording restful sleep and absent pain.
Wisteria is budding once again;
there wasn’t any wait for bus or train.
I’m sitting on the best seat, next to you,
minutely self-aware, and grateful too.

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The Downside

threat

We have to notice threats. We’ve got no claws
or fangs for combat, nor a wing for flight.
We think and link and manufacture laws.
We master fire to deflect the night.
We’re wired to react when something’s wrong,
attuned to notice off, reversed, askew,
but we’re not born with monitors for strong
approval, or detection of the true.

Our evolution comes as no surprise.
The contest is impossible to miss:
There’s no survival pressure to be wise,
and instinct doesn’t drive toward happiness.
I say we’d better better how we’re bred
or waste existence, fretting till we’re dead.

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Dim Wittedness

black sheep

The ugly duckling wanted to fit in –
he tried and failed belonging to the nest.
The solitary black sheep hates his skin
and wool, because it’s different from the rest.
But after several seasons’ unsuccess,
some nonconforming creatures try no more.
Attempted change produces too much stress,
and acting like they’re other is a bore.

That’s when they try embracing who they are,
accepting self without apology.
In quiet or aloud they start to star
in their own twist of goal or destiny.
“They do it to be different,” you assert,
but that just shows you don’t know gems from dirt.

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R-O-N-G

220px-Cerebral_lobes[1]

My first financial district job, the work
was varied – words and figures I’d produce.
But my direct employer was a jerk
who never taught me anything of use.
He wasn’t smart, and he was WASPY white,
a weak and boring sexist with a knack
for sneaky sales and budgets sorely tight.
I worked and left and rarely harkened back.

The only thing he ever said to me
that I’ve retained and valued since that turn:
“You aren’t spurred by power, love, money –
you’re rare – what motivates you is to learn.”
The man was right. It’s not what most expect.
I dearly love to learn I’m incorrect.

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Fruitful

bible

Be Fruitful, bids the Biblical command,
and Multiply. There’s little to discuss.
Though Aramaic’s hard, we understand
the order is for propagating us.
But that was written in a time and land
that needed places to be populous.
We’re crowded. We no longer dwell on sand.
We’ve even superceded blunderbuss.

Perpetuation of productive thought
may now be more significant than genes.
I’ve known a few of either sex who brought
no babes to birth but got what labor means.
And sadly more whose time was destitute:
they may have reproduced, but bore no fruit.

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Baby Gear

cups2

His parents are mid-30s, well-to-do,
besotted with him, and of course they vow
to raise him perfectly, with this year’s new
devices, paying experts to learn how.
They purchase toys and gadgets to enrich
the eating, drinking, bathing episodes.
Dishwasher-safe, non-toxic, he can switch
among five hue-coordinated modes.

But I know him. He’d rather imitate
the folks he sees. He wants a spoon and fork.
He’d really like that dinner on a plate.
He needs to practice being us. His work
is difficult, for sure, but this I know:
He doesn’t need cute plastic tools to grow.

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