Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
I stood slumped into the corner of two converging granite counter tops, struggling to focus on what he's remembering next—some bland anecdote or an irrelevant detail: *Larson, I think,* he says finally. Between pauses—with small, contemplating eyes set deep, split by his dark, Italian nose— and dragged uhhh's and hmmm's, a sowed adoration splits and grows, a seed (a supernova now). A man—half my connection to this world, to existence, to a trickling, patient bloodline. He, I; a rambling, scatterbrained mess of neurons and hard-wiring, sparks and electrical fires. My father: plagued by anger and impatience, a sitcom of clumsiness and a tied-tongue, blessed by conviction, faith and reason. I don't say any of this. He'll die first, never knowing how easily I'm reminded of what I am to become, 32 years from now, unless he finds me drunk, perhaps after reciting vows, now vulnerable to cheapening emotion into language.
0
Nov 7, 2014
Nov 7, 2014 at 1:44 PM UTC
My Father's Faith and Politics
I stood slumped into the corner of two converging granite counter tops, struggling to focus on what he's remembering next—some bland anecdote or an irrelevant detail: *Larson, I think,* he says finally. Between pauses—with small, contemplating eyes set deep, split by his dark, Italian nose— and dragged uhhh's and hmmm's, a sowed adoration splits and grows, a seed (a supernova now). A man—half my connection to this world, to existence, to a trickling, patient bloodline. He, I; a rambling, scatterbrained mess of neurons and hard-wiring, sparks and electrical fires. My father: plagued by anger and impatience, a sitcom of clumsiness and a tied-tongue, blessed by conviction, faith and reason. I don't say any of this. He'll die first, never knowing how easily I'm reminded of what I am to become, 32 years from now, unless he finds me drunk, perhaps after reciting vows, now vulnerable to cheapening emotion into language.
danny-c
Written by
32/M/American
Nov 7, 2014
Nov 7, 2014 at 1:44 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem