In first grade, I brought my music box and baby frame from we lived in Italy to show-and-tell. The frame showed me bald like an egg, half-smiling with my length and weight written with my full name across the middle. It was something small to prove something I couldn't remember. Before I went home, I put the frame with my music box on the floor by my locker-- Then I turned and found under my shoe the shattered pieces of the frame. A sense of loss twisted my insides, like when you can't find your cell phone, with all your photos and messages you treasure A piece of your life is stolen. But a friend lends you a phone, you break up with the boy who sent you those messages and meet someone else. That was how I learned to do it, by gathering up the broken pieces and bringing them home in a paper grocery bag. When my mom said it couldn't be fixed, I believed her. When she said not to worry, I still did. She said everything was going to be OK and it was. She lifted the lid of the music box, and we heard mandolins playing once more.
Day 6 of National Poetry Month. Prompts: Fortutious poem and NPM changes