
Work of the Gods
Sleeping but never long enough, waking,
doubting their new world the babies cry,
to be nursed, soothed, swaddled
into blankets, into arms loving but unsure.
But months pass and letoan arms grow
confident, more certain, charmed.
Until protean toddlers replace the smooth-cheeked infants
to become forceful in ways startling and angering
as they reject, refuse, spit, hit, kick, throw, demand. Their
color high, laughing like banshees, dragging full diapers
they snatch and run, seemingly more away than to.
Mothers weather those aeolian storms and stay vigilant,
steadfast if they’re able, to referee heated playdates,
mop up carnage to elbows, chins and knees, dry kindergarten
fear-tears. On then into the battles of homework wars
and bedtime hours, phone no phone, the internet, the slights
of school cliques, in or out. But they’ve got it covered,
think they’re getting somewhere.
Till the real vulcan work begins. Freedom, how much freedom?
Goth eyes, pink hair, sagging jeans, the stink of jock straps. Tiktok,
back-talk, birth control, so many tears, the art of cagey lying.
Hearts broken, the wafting smell of pot, sketchy new friends,
grades on the slide, miss molly, meals missed, curfews blown.
Columbine, Parkland. All talk is friction, words meant to comfort,
wound, though moments of orphean wonder keep everyone guessing.
Friend of Pasithea, you think you’re through when
the calendar turns them eighteen. Oh but the joke’s on you
when you realize that dropping them off at college guarantees
you only one thing, that further out in the world the dangers
are quieter, shrewder, gummier, and all you can do is nod
and try to keep smiling as you stand at the door, waiting, till
they cross back over your threshold as full-blown adults.