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Just now, after two ***** cranberries Errol burst into tears. He began with an aching whimper, but loud, and my little self boiled with indignation, this "how dare you take my time--this is my time"-- my time to watch pause-able movies, and read endless Facebook posts. Secondly, after a tiny moaning cry I run into the room and in the black find him to pluck him from his sad dreams. There is the happiness though, the thing those mothers yap about covered in hair, ***** from a week's sweat, the tired, collapsing hug of an infant wakes me from my drunkenness to weep. I bring him into the light and he releases from the crook of my neck to stare with wrinkled eyebrows and I wonder what I am: This woman, a smell, a voice, a flowing, shadowy goddess who rescues a sad boy from sick dreaming. Then he plucks at my nose and nnns. Then ears. Then laughs. Then sighs in a real, big, adult way that shrinks me. As I carry him sideways into the kitchen I wonder, will he write stories about the late evenings and his mother's red glass?
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Oct 7, 2014
Oct 7, 2014 at 11:50 PM UTC
Son
Just now, after two ***** cranberries Errol burst into tears. He began with an aching whimper, but loud, and my little self boiled with indignation, this "how dare you take my time--this is my time"-- my time to watch pause-able movies, and read endless Facebook posts. Secondly, after a tiny moaning cry I run into the room and in the black find him to pluck him from his sad dreams. There is the happiness though, the thing those mothers yap about covered in hair, ***** from a week's sweat, the tired, collapsing hug of an infant wakes me from my drunkenness to weep. I bring him into the light and he releases from the crook of my neck to stare with wrinkled eyebrows and I wonder what I am: This woman, a smell, a voice, a flowing, shadowy goddess who rescues a sad boy from sick dreaming. Then he plucks at my nose and nnns. Then ears. Then laughs. Then sighs in a real, big, adult way that shrinks me. As I carry him sideways into the kitchen I wonder, will he write stories about the late evenings and his mother's red glass?
Drunk mothers and the babies who love them.
kazarat
Written by
Oct 7, 2014
Oct 7, 2014 at 11:50 PM UTC
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