Poem One:
Giving Birth
(for Anna and Amelia)
If anything
I talked too much.
All the way through
Your first pregnancy,
And now your second child
(a daughter of course)
Threatens to surprise us with life.
No longer alone with you
Her shape interrupts
The balance between
The couch and the chair
Between my speaking
And your silences.
These stories must be told:
Stories of my body,
Of losing control of it,
Of the fear that sometimes
Threatens all openings
Including the one that
Allows for my voice.
But all through the hour
She is contradicting me
About to break out of you
To stun us with a cry,
An opinion,
Nothing will stop her
Coming out.
I wonder whether I will recognize her
Years later,
Or whether it is really you who
Strikes my curiosity;
You so calm in your chair
As if she will just slide out
As if my stories hold her head steady
Like the ancient hands of the midwife.
Poem Two:
The Fortune Teller Error
Just because you predicted it would
happen once and it
did,
doesn’t mean that you some special knowledge,
like the power of a palm
or a card
or some neat little answer tucked away in the pockets
of your gypsy science.
Just because you predicted it would
happen once and it
did,
doesn’t mean that it’s ever going to happen again.
Because one day somebody’s going to discover
that you’ve made an error
the very worst kind of error.
For I did gain weight that summer
forty new pounds
and despite three doctors’ negative predictions
I gave birth to three healthy girls.
But the doctors frowned
and looked at me as if I had been
the real gypsy all along.
Instead of breasts
I had given them each two shiny crystal balls,
And my girls, looking into themselves
at the ripe ages of six, eight and ten
could already see themselves sagging and wrinkling
And decided that no one would ever want them.
Poem Three:
A STRANGE DAY
A blind opens to the introduction of light.
All the animals you do not hear
(because they are somewhere else
not outside your window)
Look for food, and you have nothing to offer them.
The man sleeping next to you
Is missing an ear and several other
Parts which you swore you remembered
He once owned.
You share everything now.
You are wearing his ear.
Startled at how distorted you own
Voice sounds through someone else’s lobe,
You check to make sure that this is what
You agreed to.
He has three eyes now:
Two sleep while the one which once
Belonged to you, by its very nature
Keeps a close watch on things.
Poem Four:
Negatives
This one is like the last one
Which is identical to the one before that:
The floor is covered with rubble
The bed stretches out to block the window
The doors will not lock
The stairs will not move.
Outside, street lights have no shadows
Cars go by in silence
The man walking behind me says
Don’t be afraid
As if he knew this fear
As if, he too, held his house keys
Like small daggers. As if he too,
Kept a scream on the edge of his lips.
Someone is always, every minute,
Taking a picture of me.
It is more than a moment’s violation;
It is to never know privacy again.
Poem Five:
HerStory
We started together/
full of the same history.
Our dreams were formed by
the same kiss.
A man waits
at the other side of the mirror.
But this touch is re-touch:
When we ask permission to kiss each other
We break through the code of lips.
Your lips on mine are not the history
we began with
the history that
keeps inviting us back.
No, there is no word for this love
in our mother’s memories and
Your hands have no memory of my breasts.
This night we have only a residual memory
to guide us.
I know what it is
the world, yes, but also ourselves this time.
Somewhere outside of this history we were
born into, waits the memory of our love
when it could not be denied.