Victoria Chang’s poetry is somewhat more challenging for me than previous entries for this year’s National Poetry Month. She uses language fluidly, with repetitions I don’t quite grasp. Especially the series about Barbie Chang, who seems to be eternally hovering at the periphery of the cool kids’ table.
For that reason I was going to
give you “Mr. Darcy”. And then I
came across “How Alone Barbie Chang’s Mother”, and carried me to being a senior
in college when my mom died. So here we are.
“How Alone Barbie Chang’s Mother”
How alone Barbie Chang’s
mother
must have felt doing
nothing
but dying her mother actually
stopped dying her hair
in
January stopped being an actuary
for her money she
must
have known her time was limited
did the diseased birch
tree
know they were going to cut it down
how quickly the air
around
it filled in the space it does no
good to know a mother’s
face
who would have known that a
mother’s face could
be
erased too at some point we are all
eliminated from this
earth
at some point most of us give birth
at some point we lose
a
mother at some point we are all
disappointments who
can’t
possibly care for others when
our mothers die we
are
all lost and there are no words for
it some want to
name
us as grieving others wrongly
name us heroes
No comments:
Post a Comment