Another Morning on Earth
by Meryl Natchez
On the altar in the living room, pictures
of my parents,
my brother at 40—one of the last
photos—Larry’s parents,
my mother and her sisters on Atlantic City
Boardwalk in the 30’s,
and Erwin, my mother’s last love, for the
besotted, lively gaze
she turns on him, though I try to keep him
behind the flowers. Perhaps they watch me,
even watch over me. When I fell
and it was just bad enough
to put up railings and walk more slowly,
I felt they had given me a warning.
Or when the baby is here, or when we
gather,
turkey or brisket or pot de crème, or an
ordinary morning,
open newspaper or book or laptop, the
ramekin of salt
on the table—there they are,
watching.
I change the flowers as they wilt,
alstroemerias, anemones, the last sweet
peas,
because I want my dead to keep watching out
for us,
for the children and grandchildren and
beloved friends
in this chancy world where death lurks on
the landing
or in the car, or microbes
or snipers or breast
or bone or stomach.
What do they think about the time I waste?
Such an abundance that I throw whole hours
into online Scrabble or Threes with the
excuse that they
are a form of meditation,
because it’s hard to be here now,
now being a confused elixir
of sun and fog and email and bird shadow
and superstition
and chicken feet and toast and news
and insatiable longing and I have to pee, a
fusillade
of random moments that can converge
into a ravishing pattern,
which I have, from time to time and
briefly, glimpsed.
But mostly I wander the planet with
blinders on,
going somewhere fast.
I like to keep moving.
I like my time full.
And I like to believe that because
their photos look out from their niche
in the living room, they are present, and
if
I keep a fresh parade of flowers on the
altar
they will keep on keeping me
from harm.
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