Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
I tip-toe up your spine, a ladder for gentle fingers. I count each tickled vertebra. (You flinch at only three.) Your small body is like a feather in my lap, yet your spindly legs reach past my knees. When did you grow so tall? Nine years I have over you, and though your child warmth is still heat against my body, I wonder at the gap between your world and mine.
0
Dec 9, 2012
Dec 9, 2012 at 11:03 AM UTC
Millennial
I tip-toe up your spine, a ladder for gentle fingers. I count each tickled vertebra. (You flinch at only three.) Your small body is like a feather in my lap, yet your spindly legs reach past my knees. When did you grow so tall? Nine years I have over you, and though your child warmth is still heat against my body, I wonder at the gap between your world and mine.
zoe-mize
Written by
Dec 9, 2012
Dec 9, 2012 at 11:03 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem