Talking To My Son Before Sleep by Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer
Thinking of water; untangling knots. Day by day, T. Day by day.
Talking To My Son Before Sleep
Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer“Which is bigger,” he asks me, “the ocean or sky,”
and I want to tell him the heart, which even today
has been practicing vastness, is learning to say yesin new languages, learning to stretch beyond
the center, beyond the lips, learning to be more moon
and less woman, to reflect light without owning it,learning to lose whatever it has used before as a measure.
This is the way I want to love: in an idiom stronger
than tongues, I want to love in the way that tides pulland release, like the moon which holds without touch,
I want to invite the sky to create a bigger space in me
a place spacious enough to hold all the wingsof the passing moment. I want to be buoyant enough
to carry all of love’s weight. “The sky,” I say.
“The sky is bigger, but the ocean is also wide.”He is satisfied by my words, closes his eyes.
In my chest, a star falls. In my belly
strong tug of tides.
jackie
lovely.