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Four Months Ago on a Sunday Afternoon

Four months ago

on a Sunday afternoon

I told a father

we tried.

 

We tried.

 

We tried to fix his home

but it was not enough.

 

Not enough for the trash.

Not enough for the bugs.

Not enough for the urine-soaked beds.

Not enough for the smell and rot

that had settled itself into the walls.

 

It turns out

some things cannot be rescued

by twenty-four hands

and a wrench and

lots of good intentions.

 

And little girls

who are ten and eight and six

deserve more

than survival.

 

They deserve to write their names

to know how to sound out each letter

as they put pencil to paper

proof of their existence

and evidence that they belong here.

 

They deserve to count

how many flowers they found

or how many clean socks they have.

 

They deserve to open a book

and not look at it

like it was written in another language

asking what do these numbers say?

Not knowing what letters are called.

 

Four months ago

on a Sunday afternoon

I told a father

I could help take his girls to school

so they would not go to foster care.

 

I said

you can visit them.

I said

you can call every day.

I said

when you are really ready,

you can bring them back home to stay.

 

And maybe I believed

that would be simple

Or more truly I believed

the were no better options.

 

Four months ago

on a Sunday afternoon

I picked up three little girls

and brought them home.

 

Little girls excited for sleepovers

and learning and school

because "we've never done that before in our life."

 

And now?

 

Now they have my bed.

My room.

My food.

My schedule.

My gas tank.

My floor covered in somebody else’s hair ties

and paper scraps

and tiny socks

and all the evidence

that children are here.

 

Now we drive to school

and count every trampoline we see

and wonder how the world can be

so big.

 

Now they can write their names.

 

Now they can count all the way to fifty.

 

Now they can read little words

like cat

and hat

and mom

and dad

 

and if you do not think

that is a miracle

then you have never met a child

standing on the edge

of her own beginning.

 

Cleaning lice.

Treating scabies.

Eighteen doctor’s appointments.

 

Eighteen.

 

Not because they are sick or dramatic.

Not because I am exaggerating.

Not because hardship makes a better story.

 

Eighteen-

because neglect

is expensive.

 

Little girls who ask me

if hot air balloons are real

and if they exist in our world.

 

Our world.

 

Like maybe there are worlds

inside worlds

and theirs had been so small

they were not yet sure

which one they were living in.

 

Little girls who ask me

why they never went to school before.

 

Little girls who ask me

why the other children

can read and write

and know big numbers.

 

Little girls who ask me

how there can be that many children

for real? For real?

 

As if a classroom

is some kind of impossible abundance

filled with all the children there could ever be.

 

As if a hallway full of backpacks

and lunchboxes

and sharpened pencils

is too much

to be believed.

 

Little girls who save

every penny

every nickel

every dime

every quarter they find

because Daddy is going to buy a new house the littlest one says.

 

And what do you even do with that?

 

What do you do

with hope

when it shows up in the hands of a child

who still believes

adults always mean what they say?

 

Little girls who have birthdays.

 

Little girls who turn eleven

without knowing

how to say eleven.

 

So I called Mom

and said

there’s a birthday.

Would you like to come?

 

And then I taught this little girl

how to count to eleven

so when mom asks her age

she would know how to answer.

 

Do you hear me?

 

I taught a child

how to say

the age

she already was.

 

And if that does not split you open

then I do not know

what will.

 

And she draws us pictures

of the inventions she makes

from pipe cleaners

and paper towel rolls.

 

And her sister pulls magnets

from the refrigerator door

and says, Look!

 

as she sends them spinning across the kitchen floor

like she has discovered physics and magic.

 

And there are cartwheels.

And handstands.

And climbing trees too tall.

Catching chickens.

And songs.

And stories.

And all the loud bright wild ordinary things

children were always meant to do.

 

And then one says

with no change in her voice at all

that she is surprised our puppies are still alive

because all the ones they had always died

but that is okay

because they know what to do

you dig a little hole

and bury them under the house.

 

And just like that

grief walks into the room

wearing a child’s voice

so it sounds a lot more like

a question or a naive confidence.

 

And just like that

you remember

that children can hand you horror

the same way they hand you a St. Patrick's day clover.

 

Four months ago

on a Sunday afternoon

I became an Auntie.

 

And somewhere between the school drop-offs

and the doctor visits

and the lice treatments

and the birthdays

and the trampolines

and the little words

and the refrigerator magnets

and the questions no child should have to ask

 

something in me

became slightly mother-shaped.

 

I do not know

how long this will last.

 

I do not know

what will be healed

or returned

or kept or left behind.

 

But I know

that four months ago

on a Sunday afternoon

 

I thought

I was helping some children.

 

I did not know

we were becoming family.

 

And love arrived like this—

welcomed and unexpected,

hungry,

needy,

sleeping in my bed,

asking impossible questions

on the way to school.

Request permission to use this poem
Written by
SkylaGM
28 / F / Hawaii
Published
Mar 30
Lines·Words
219·989
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