The Hillbilly Baby Waits
Being a Chicken Nugget Child felt like:
Standing on metal vents with bare feet.
The cold air-lifting me towards
the soup bean pot boiling mystery.
The space between hot and cold
where goosebumps form
Cold cement porches with Kentucky blue paint
Layered like tree rings telling time
in lead paint and limestone rain.
I’d pick daisies and deliver them
to the porch swing to begin my dance
back and forth toward commitment
man’s whatever it means to be a wanted woman
What did I know about “he” or “love” or “me”?
I just knew “not”
As an only child up a holler,
my first word was No
Not yet
Not me
Not ready for much more
than blooming
Just blackberry fingers and sunsets
that lingered deep into the pocket secrets
of the woods like a best friend who
always stays the night.
4 thoughts on "The Hillbilly Baby Waits"
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Your poem builds this palpable atmosphere of discovery in its lines and your details. Love “As an only child up a holler,/my first word was No” and “the woods like a best friend who/always stays the night.”
nailed it!
I enjoyed this. Especially the imagery in those last four lines beginning with the blackberry fingers. Did make me wonder something I have learned since moving to Kentucky. I would like to ask a native Kentuckian. Is what you call here “Kentucky blue” the same as “haint blue”?
Your poem describes a Kentucky familiar to me, and, I imagine, to many others. Nice writing, Samantha.