Flying
home after spending Thanksgiving back East,
I
strike up a conversation with the mouselike woman in the next seat,
traveling
alongside her daughter, who has just competed in
an
Ironman triathlon down in the Yucatan.
They
are from Canada, but now
reside, like me, in Portland.
The
daughter is perhaps twenty, her bright orange hair
glowing
pale against her deeply sunburnt skin.
She
wears a t-shirt and shorts and all through the flight
she
keeps standing up and stretching in the aisle,
flexing
her thick, muscular thighs despite
the
flashing fasten seat belts sign.
There
is quite a bit of turbulence. “We’ll be hitting
some
isolated pockets of bumpy air,” warns the captain,
his
voice tinny through the intercom.
The
stewardesses finally force her to sit.
She
fidgets in her seat like a restless thoroughbred.
At
one point the young athlete produces a plastic baggie
full
of long, translucent orange strips of fruit.
She
takes one out and bites into it, then waves the bag at me,
across
her mother’s lap. “Papaya?” she offers.
I
decline but she shakes the bag, and I don't want to be rude,
so
I gingerly pull out a piece and gnaw on the end.
It’s
thick and squared off and rubbery.
I’m
hungry, having forgotten the box of beef jerky
my
mother bought me for my trip back to the West Coast.
I
can see it sitting right where I left it
atop
the low bookshelf of my sister’s old room,
which
is finally after all these years being converted into a guest room.
She
moved out years ago, but recently fled the time zone
to
relocate for a more lucrative job. She’s the favored child,
the
baby, the successful one in the family.
She’s
the one winning the race while I remain winded,
trudging
far behind. The possessions she abandoned
in
her old room when she graduated
are
being boxed up and stashed in the crawl space.
The
walls will be given their first fresh coat of paint in years.
I
awoke in that same room this morning,
and
had trouble escaping from that big plush bed.
Groggy,
I gathered up the last few items I hadn’t packed,
stuffing
them into my already bulging suitcase,
making
sure to throw away the empty envelopes and wrappers
I’d
strewn about during my stay.
That
box of smoked meat, bought by my thoughtful mother,
is
the only remnant of myself left behind, her forgetful, ungrateful son.
It’s
a minor thing, I know, but for some reason, it upsets me.
It
seems emblematic of all the ways I’ve let my mother down
over
the years. I may be less self-destructive
than
I was when I was young, but after all this time
I
still struggle to pay my bills, have not managed
to
produce any grandchildren, and I’m sure as hell
not
running any marathons. I barely function as an adult.
And
to compound my guilt, she will no doubt
waste
the postage to mail that box of jerky across the country,
no
matter how much I beg her not to bother.
Well, I would say this is a marathon of a poem that you have definitely won! Right from the title, you had me hooked.
ReplyDeleteYour pacing of perception has grown as sensibility
ReplyDeletewas enlarging. Is it technique and craft... or insight? Lovely blending of both I'd venture. Your sense of material is immediate and articulate: right choices from beginning to end, a pleasure to encounter. Accessible, and compounding its details that resonate and complicate.
Affections and praise,
U.F.