A first collection of poetry; learning to speak; learning to listen. |
If If I were angry I might be able to rid myself of the lump that weights my words in my throat, keeps me from feeling what I say, as I report your absence to co-workers, who murmur empty words of comfort. Why is it I cannot dredge up the fierce hate of hurt, the pride of self that flings your actions at your feet, denies my own involvement in the need you had to leave? I sit in your room and stare at the walls that once absorbed the harshness of rock’s screaming vibrato. Silence stares back at me, speaks of the times my screams met the tempo of your music with anger, demanding you grant silence. Now, you have removed your music far beyond the limits of my ears, leaving a silence that screams louder than your music once did. I long to feel the pounding beat of cresting sound reverberate through the walls once more. The anger that fueled parental fury has dissipated like the echo of your footsteps across the porch, heard before you entered the door to greet me with a son’s kiss. I leave the door ajar, fall asleep on the couch as I wait endlessly for the sound of your return. |