Sharon Olds writes about her kids . . .
by: Sharon Olds
When I come home late at night and go in to kiss them,
I see my girl with her arm curled around her head,
her mouth a little puffed, like one sated, but
slightly pouted like one who hasn't had enough,
her eyes so closed you would think they have rolled the
iris around to face the back of her head,
the eyeball marble-naked under that
thick satisfied desiring lid,
she lies on her back in abandon and sealed completion,
and the son in his room, oh the son he is sideways in his bed,
one knee up as if he is climbing
sharp stairs, up into the night,
and under his thin quivering eyelids you
know his eyes are wide open and
staring and glazed, the blue in them so
anxious and crystally in all this darkness, and his
mouth is open, he is breathing hard from the climb
and panting a bit, his brow is crumpled
and pale, his fine fingers curved,
his hand open, and in the center of each hand
the dry dirty boyish palm
resting like a cookie. I look at him in his
quest, the thin muscles of his arms
passionate and tense, I look at her with her
face like the face of a snake who has swallowed a deer,
content, content--and I know if I wake her she'll
smile and turn her face toward me though
half asleep and open her eyes and I
know if I wake him he'll jerk and say Don't and sit
up and stare about him in blue
unrecognition, oh my Lord how I
know these two. When love comes to me and says
What do you know, I say This girl, this boy.
Olds knows her kids, each and every hair on their heads and nail on their fingers. That's what parents do. They spend 17 or 18 or 19 years teaching their children how to fly, and then they open the window and watch them wing away.
My daughter will be leaving in July for medical school. Haven't really wrapped my mind around that fast-approaching cleaving. This weekend, my nephew graduated from high school. I attended his ceremony on Friday, and this evening I went to his graduation party.
It's an exciting time for young people--on the cusp of their first real tastes of adulthood. I could see it in my nephew's eyes. They were full of joy and excitement and hope. That's the way it should be. Same with my daughter. Both of them are gazing into the future, while we parents are mourning the little boy who loved playing Angry Birds and the little girl who fell asleep to Frosty the Snowman every afternoon.
I wish I had enough money to fund both my daughter's and nephew's educations. I would at the drop of a hat. (For my international disciples, I should explain that, in the United States, students have to pay to go to college. I know, I know. It's messed up.) Unfortunately, poets don't make a whole lot of money, unless a Pulitzer Prize is involved, so the best I can do is offer love, support, and words.
I have no doubt my nephew and daughter are going to change the world. They're kind and intelligent and funny. As Olds says, I know this girl, this boy. And I couldn't be prouder.
Saint Marty took a day off from The Daily Poet to rite this poem for his nephew . . .
High School Graduate
by: Martin Achatz
for Caden, May 23, 2025
I know you’re tired of all the advice:
live in the moment, choose kindness,
measure success by the number of people
who love you, follow the path that’s
overgrown and rocky. You’re weary
of all those clichés from us oldsters
who will gladly show you our scars,
name them like willful kids or
monuments on a Civil War battlefield.
Instead, I want to tell you this morning
I found a rabbit in my backyard. His black
eyes panicked, he dragged himself
over the grass, hind legs useless
as driftwood. Perhaps he was dropped
there by a hungry owl after biting
and clawing and screaming, his spine
splintered by the fist of the ground.
I wanted to help mend his broken body,
watch him bound away into the lilac bushes.
Sometimes, though, beautiful things cannot
be fixed, and all we can do is give thanks
that we have hearts that can be broken
by suffering and tongues to sing something
sacred and tender about this fragile world
you now hold in the palm of your hand.
Sometimes, though, beautiful things cannot
be fixed, and all we can do is give thanks
that we have hearts that can be broken
by suffering and tongues to sing something
sacred and tender about this fragile world
you now hold in the palm of your hand.