My Ex-Husband Turns 50
And I grow old with memory.
Sorrows I nursed, the way I held
Our children, counting every breath,
Wet and taut, worried that I had them
All wrong. They thrived
On my ministrations. Anger is different.
It starved me for years.
Life’s fierce demands
Too much for us. These days, I blame it
On the air. I was a young bride,
So sure in my satin that I could turn
Him on my hips. We did not fit. Weaned
From that life, hardly ready for what followed.
Years passed.
In a basement, doors locked against
Inevitable police neighbors called
When the band played too loud.
Someone is singing, still,
Though we cannot hear those waves
Crashing as they must against
All that we chose to do.
Key words: Aging, turning 50, memory