Somewhere between eggshells and landmines Were the creaking floors upon which I played Carefully, for her wrath could be detonated At a footfall, just a bit too heavy From a word uttered under the breath A mess left too long in the sink.
But her embrace was warm, Wrapping around me like sheets from the dryer And when she put on pause her own life To tend to me at my sick-bed, Her eyes showed only tender love. “My baby goat,” she would say, affectionately, And leave a kiss upon my feverish brow.
She is a living contradiction, my mother: Churning disapproval shattering the gleam That she put into the hopeful eyes of a child Just a moment before. I lived in perpetual uncertainty, Never knowing which mother I might see next: The raven or the hen.
And now she looks at me with disappointment, Wondering aloud why her children fear her. Her capriciousness eroded away any trust And much of the fondness as well Her hot-blooded adoration And her ice-cold tantrums Have mixed so long now All that is left is Lukewarm like the bathwater Left over from when the Baby was thrown out.