You are not a stringbean.
I cannot eat you, yet.
Nor an illusion. Or me, but smaller.
You are your own star. Shining. Never
falling. Hands thrown up in the air, yelling, rollercoaster glee.
It's true I was a magical mother, (I
saw your heart, open and close, light against
darkness. Blood and tongue and teeth. Smiling already).
A message, a language, even then.
sono: sound gram: to write.
Your letter to the world; we hear it in light.
They say they don't seek out
(for girls versus boys)
a lack, an empty spot.
Castrated boy equals female.
But a line, a presence of lineage.
A string. Going back.
(Oh how Freud would tremble to know this.)
You are not a moon. Nor
darkness but your own sun.
You quirk your mouth sideways in a smile.
Reaching wide, dancing the world into being
and scaling walls I
never could have dreamed.
There are no lies yet to tell.
And you will find your way there
line or lack.
************************
(For Maia, at three. Future Fourth Waver.)
*Inspired, in part, by Anne Sexton's "My Stringbean, My Lovely Woman." Also refers to my older poem about seeing a sonogram picture, which is available online here.
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
My Lovely Girl*
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4 comments:
Have you already gifted this to her? If not, do you think you will as a celebration rite-of-passage when she reaches any certain age?
Inspiring. Now I want to do something like this. :)
Oh, by the time she's old enough to really read, she's going to have a whole bunch of these, I'm sure. The boy prince, too. :) The first one I have taped into their baby book. One of these days, I'm going to bind all the blog entries in a hardbound something or other. With all my free time, I don't know why I haven't already done it. ::grin::
awww, that is nice.
I love this! What a wonderful thing to be able to give your daughter.
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