Teeth Dreams
This is not therapy:
I already understand why I lose teeth in dreams.
I replace my real toothbrush every few months.
But, how often should I replace the cinnamon sticks my daughter and I hung over the doors?
This could be a confessional:
my grandbabes are All.
They arrived after the cinnamon sticks we hung:
my daughter’s abundance, both boys, my Joy.
They are why I brush,
postponing my slow going
the way of sea turtles and elephants and gorillas and….
The oldest learned last week to say Turtle.
I hope he learns names of countless once and living things:
a name connotes Holy.
Every night, I hold my grandsons’ faces in my mind
and think their names,
willing their safety,
willing them whole.
I, as powerless as a toothless turtle flailing in an acid ocean,
wave a stale cinnamon stick at falling bombs.
6 thoughts on "Teeth Dreams"
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“powerless as a toothless turtle flailing in an acid ocean”: love this striking comparison
I loved this line: “I hope he learns names of countless once and living things:/a name connotes Holy.”
Sometimes cinnamon is all we have! What a gorgeous poem!
Sue, this is great. We have grandchildren that age and
you caught the exact feeling
of what it’s like.
☆☆☆☆
This poem took me on a wonderful journey!
Thank you all. I wasn’t sure if I had flaked off enough rust to do this month again!