-
Update: This poem was recently published in Waterways: Poetry in the Mainstream Volume 34 #4
- The Yellow Steamroller
So much depends
upon
a yellow
steamroller
- buried
in the dirt - behind the shed
- On a bitterly cold afternoon, my tugboat man and I embarked on our annual yard cleanup project. I raked all the pine needles shaken loose during the fury of Alaska-borne winds that roared down the coast to Southern California while he trimmed the eucalyptus and mulberry trees.
- Metal rake clanged against metal.
- I saw bright yellow igniting the dirt and pine needles suffused it with a gleaming radiance through the brown.
- I threw down the rake, crouched on all fours, and with bare fingers dug through the wet fecund soil to uncover an abandoned yellow Matchbox toy from the spot where there once was a sandbox that my son’s dad built for him when we first moved to this house in 1985.
- I discover in situ a three-inch wide artifact imbued with all the wonder of my perfect child.
- I gently brushed away twenty-five years of encrusted soil and sand.
I was engulfed in a wave of memory. I was there. I saw him–my four-year-old son in this beautiful huge sandbox filled with fresh, clean sand. I saw him as I often watched him from the bay window in the kitchen overlooking the backyard where I would wash dishes and keep an eye on him, keeping him safe–always keeping him safe–as he played in the sand with his dump trucks and cherry pickers and this steam roller and his buckets and plastic cups and forks and sticks with his cats and dog always near, and the loveliness of the memory set me on my heels and I cried.
- Happy tears for the exquisite soft rosy glow of healthy well-fed cheeks, the deep Imperial jade green eyes, the curls that were my curls, my boy, my angel love.
- The boy whose every breath contains a whisper of the intangible all encompassing LOVE I possess for this being who was a part of me before he was a part of the earth and sun and sky and sand.
- The boy who is my heart.
- I shut my eyes tight to keep the pictures from disappearing, but the ephemeral/evanescent impressions floated away with the tears that spilled out for the remembering of the beauty of a luminous child playing in a sandbox, singing to himself and constructing sand sculptures of the future, or, in his case, building words and spinning thoughts and erratica.
- Those grains of sand that between his fingers mashed and smashed into forts and tunnels were the detritus of the granite from whence his brain reformed them grain by grain into skyscrapers of words and sentences that flow like a path from the back door to the sandbox.
- A sort of homage to…
The Red Wheelbarrow
William Carlos Williams - so much depends
upon
- a red wheel
barrow
- glazed with rain
water
- beside the white
chickens.
Oh man, I loved this and am scared of it all at the same time. My babies are so young still, but I will be where you are, sooner than I think. Praise God for the promise of grandchildren.
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I’m afraid this world is too cruel to bring more innocent children into. That’s my fear; all the violence and abuse…
On Sat, Oct 26, 2013 at 1:13 PM, Enchanted Seashells…Confessions of a Tugbo
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The world has always been a fearsome place. Yet we endure.
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Yes. Endure we do.
On Sat, Oct 26, 2013 at 7:27 PM, Enchanted Seashells…Confessions of a Tugbo
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Beautiful story. Reminds me of when I was a kid, I’d go across the street to play at my cousins’ house. We’d play in the sand box with Tonka trucks, which we named “Joe” and “Mac” lol.
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Days of innocence and hope.
On Sun, Oct 27, 2013 at 5:05 AM, Enchanted Seashells…Confessions of a Tugbo
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Definitely 🙂
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Such a sweet story, I could almost see that little boy of yours. 🙂
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Thank you for your kind comment; I wish he was still four-years-old and out playing in the sandbox. I see the little boy too, and sometimes a mom wishes they’d never grow up and away!!
On Sun, Oct 27, 2013 at 8:29 AM, Enchanted Seashells…Confessions of a Tugbo
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