This poem originally appeared in the 2018 issue of Portland Review. We are republishing it online in remembrance of Molly Brodak, a poet and memoirist, who passed away last month.
I’m my mom
and my dad.
Two
blanks,
coat and hat on a rack.
Mom’s hands, endless
sea reach
without sound,
Dad’s downturn
luck, god-wrest
force of coin.
At night
the moon won’t
stay at all,
won’t rest with me, where I
in rough text,
old outlines
of refusals,
also do not rest.
The ax in the spine of a fir
is grown around.
A knock at the door
is no one,
just sound.
_____
Image attribution: “DSC02182” by hellothomas via Creative Commons