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My mother was a writer. I remember her, papers spread out upon a bed sheet in the sand, stacked pebbles protecting her work from the wind as I made drip-castles at the water's edge and braided crowns from wild poppies. I would run to her so she could rub grape sunscreen into my sandy shoulders and I asked her once, “Mama, is that poetry?” and she said “No little one, you are poetry, this only tries to be.” and I thanked her, and ran back to the water to search for flat stones to skip, and thought no more of poetry.
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Oct 3, 2016
Oct 3, 2016 at 9:31 PM UTC
Poetry
My mother was a writer. I remember her, papers spread out upon a bed sheet in the sand, stacked pebbles protecting her work from the wind as I made drip-castles at the water's edge and braided crowns from wild poppies. I would run to her so she could rub grape sunscreen into my sandy shoulders and I asked her once, “Mama, is that poetry?” and she said “No little one, you are poetry, this only tries to be.” and I thanked her, and ran back to the water to search for flat stones to skip, and thought no more of poetry.
okayindigo
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Oct 3, 2016
Oct 3, 2016 at 9:31 PM UTC
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