This is a poem about my best friend and her unexpected pregnancy. |
Paula Lehman 10/3/06 Crossroads I remember when we became sisters. Your hand in mine, blood in between. The stab of your Girl Scout pin. Junior high had been so traumatic And from then on I remember a rush of changes. But the two of us Were constants Even in our Separate circles. Everyone always thought I would be the one To get in trouble, To drop out, Waste my “brilliant mind.” In the end, even my love Couldn’t save you From yourself, From your need To feel loved. I left you to them And maybe I’ll never Forgive myself, Though you forced me out. I thought you had disappeared, Sank into the person That I didn’t know Forever. And then you were literally gone. Stopped going to school, Taking walks, Going to the mall. I heard the vicious rumors, Our’s was always a Talkative small town. I pretended you no longer Existed. Or that I had some reason To grudge you my support Because you had bad Judgement of character. You called, after I’d Shut you out. Crying. Alone. And afraid. I should have been Better than that. I should have swallowed My pride and just called. We went out for coffee At the truck stop along The highway-Junction Eat. I never realized how fitting A crossroads theme was Until much later. You looked drained, walking. We were too young to even drive. Your eyes were red And you told me everything. The grease of the hamburgers And cooking onions Mixing with cigar smoke And jukebox music. I strained to hear you. It was as if nothing Had ever changed. “I don’t know what I should do. People talk about Choices as if There really were any. Any way, you lose Something. Of yourself, of your life, Of your future. You always have some Part of you that Is never the same. Something is always Born And something always Dies.” |