When I was thirteen my mother told me The story of my birth, December 29th 1995
She brought me home, but something wasn't Right, because I was blue and didn't Move She took me to the children's hospital Where I stayed for two weeks, but This poem isn't about me,
Because there was a lot of other blue babies too All with the same underdeveloped lungs And still bodies, There was one baby Who was in the room next to mine, Just beyond the thin hospital curtain
Every night her mother would sit next to Her, her with tubes up and down her veins Laying in that little plastic box Meant to keep the blue babies alive
This women would sing Amazing Grace To her newborn, and according to my mother She had a beautiful voice
She was praying nothing would happen To her blue baby, and so was My mother, but for me
One night the women's voice wasn't singing Anymore, the lullaby was over and she Was screaming Because I'm the one writing this poem And her singing couldn't make her baby Any less blue
That baby's little plastic box couldn't do its job, So now the mother is feeling the same way
And the screaming was Heart wrenching, something I never want to Feel, A scream my mother never wanted To hear
Today I went into the ocean And my lips turned blue, along with my hands and legs I couldn't help myself from thinking Of that blue baby and Amazing Grace
Sometimes I wish I was the Blue baby, and that the Amazing-Grace-Mother's Words could have meant something More Than the stillness of a baby with Underdeveloped lungs