Contemplating the Works of Mary Shelley
25 years ago, in selfishness and hubris,
I created life.
What was I thinking,
to inflict this monstrous world created by men
on something innocent and helpless?
I too have a complicated relationship
with motherhood,
but it took me far longer
to learn that everyone
is a morally complex monster.
I wanted children long before I selected a husband
and wanted a son long before I was pregnant,
because I feared
I could not safely raise a daughter
in this monstrous world of men.
My wounds are less deep and fatal,
but is there a surviving
woman of my age,
in this monstrous world created by men,
without trauma?
Once delivering a son I felt a nagging worry that
like Mary Shelley I might author both man and monster.
Yet now that son is fully a man
in possession of prefrontal cortex and job
and cardinal array of friends.
I assembled the parts that made the man: his father’s hands,
his grandmother’s coloring, his grandfathers’ names,
the height of my Dutch ancestors. Yet he is more than their sum.
Although I take full credit and
apologize again for the scar on his chin.
My creation has taken control of his story and I am in awe
of the firewood gathered to warm the hearths of others,
the life lessons gleaned from storied monsters,
cloaked wizards, and fiery stormriders.
Somehow, learning to be a kinder, gentler soul than me.
2 thoughts on "Contemplating the Works of Mary Shelley"
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This is such a fine weaving of Shelley with your “creation.” Love how you get the patchwork idea in with “he is more than their sum.” Well crafted! “My creation has taken control of his story and I am in awe” – yes!!
I really love this poem for its explanation of the hopes, fears and dreams of parenthood.