After babies and demands, jarring
you from sleep, sucking your life,
your body theirs, the toddler commands I want
I want at the grocery store stomping down aisles
knocking you into someone
you don’t want to be, red-faced and screaming. The battle of will
ending with capitulation and desire
for something other than what you are left
holding in your arms.
She is standing on the precipice
of her body still demanding
what she wants, rules for behavior, limited
visits to the school, no longer wanting you
to please come, Mama, please come
to every field trip, picking apples with the 1st grade class, clamoring,
demanding more; 5th grade struggles with math–
formulas and numbers scribbled
in composition notebooks over the scarred
dining room table never add up
to what you want them to be.
You succumbed to her pleas, hating
every second, every game, every
recital you sat through, the years
of grading student papers in the back
of the assembly, on the sidelines
at soccer games, half-watching
distracted, waiting for her name to be called, wanting
it to be over so you could reclaim
your life; the ceremony
in 8th grade where she stood
in her sequined purple dress; already too old,
but demanding and receiving.
Now you wait, idle, your life
like a plane speeding down a runway, wheels lifting in the air,
suspended between here
and where she will ultimately be, and you
left behind, staring out the window
face pressed against the glass.