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An idea that takes getting used to:
Your firstborn daughter
gets married.
She flashes the gold ring
and suddenly the tiny hand
you clutched so tightly at the park
as she slid down the slide
or swung on the swing
no longer looks familiar.
You stood by
as she went from hardly making decisions
to making most decisions,
some good, some bad,
some with more head than heart
and vice versa
and you always felt part
of that back and forth
like a clock's pendulum
as her days ticked forward
there were decisions
you scrutinized
looking for signs of character
or lack of it,
decisions you judged
in your head, tongue held,
and others you couldn't hold back on
but not this one,
the only one that truly matters,
with a gravity
that will make it stick
hopefully
the choice of a lifelong partner.
Now you're on the sidelines
a bystander
and it occurs to you
for the first time
she's always been her own person,
she never belonged to you,
all you ever really had
were memories, expectations
and hopes;
One line follows the next
with an end rhyme
or without one,
there's a rhythm to it
a sense
you're trying to catch
and you feel alone
you don't get it
like one
who learned in school
how to hate poetry.
2 comments:
Very touching poem! I have a companion poem for you! It's a poem I wrote several years ago. Interestingly, the common word in both your poem and my poem is "gravity"! Here's my poem to complement yours ...
For his daughter
My minnow, my minnow,
You swam in the ocean
Of non-specific love.
Like any father, I was there for a bit,
Swimming alongside you,
Making sure, just making sure.
But now I find you
In a fishbowl of specificities.
You have your tastes and your opinions.
A political leaning.
A point of view.
A way that you move through the daily onslaught of people with their elbows and knees,
Upturned noses and downcast eyes.
Losing patience, losing trust.
Did I say “fishbowl”?
That was inaccurate
And perhaps a bit cruel.
I apologize.
Your world, I imagine, is
More like a pond than a fishbowl.
Deep and murky at the bottom,
But teeming with life.
And you: flashing and rippling,
With a strong dorsal fin,
Moving with and moving against
The gravity of the liquid.
And I?
I’m a big old fish
With many scars from hooks and barbs,
And bruised and missing scales.
A survivor, but
I won’t survive for too long
In your pond.
Or any pond.
I would like to swim in it sometimes though
If you will allow me to.
Swim alongside you for a bit.
From an ocean of ‘non-specific love’ to a ‘fishbowl of specificities’, what strange provocative phrasing. It’s more like the world around her is closing in, and less like she’s making the choices. And then you take it back, make it a pond teeming with life and dark depths. That’s your anxiety coming out I think. And there’s another similarity besides gravity, your daughter’s ‘flashing’, signifying her independence, her movement away, and my daughter’s ‘flash’ of gold ring indicating the same. And both poems seem to end with a certain sense of regret.
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