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Jul 2013
Something you can hold
Touch to make it feel real
Like it actually had been there
At least somewhere in time

A wedding band slipped on my mother's finger
After he proposed with a bread tie

More than two decades ago
That's how long I've planted myself here
And I wasn't always around in their short story

Happy-sad-sided short story it was,
But when holding the circle up to the sunlight
A bright fable
Beams through
An old story
A fantasy I call childhood

In the middle of that ring

The strands of light stretch around one bend in its
dampened golden body
and across to another
Like a spider web tangled in between the sheen of once forever
It's a little big on my finger

It's my mothers, just a little bigger than me, but it holds a different story to her
One she doesn't seem to think about
Not like the way I think about mine

I remember my father's gold
Roped into his dark hands
Stained by sun
His working hands
Hardened by oil fields and car engines
The giant callous he called a palm

The roughest surface spread love into my skin
Rubbing it into my back, or gently accross my small sticky hands, like butter
Like I was his southern sweat bread
They were so different
There castle would have fallen anyway
My mothers kitchen reads "Yankee"
Scottie Green
Written by
Scottie Green
569
     Akemi and Nat Lipstadt
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