Fruits of Labor
by
Kelly Sargent
I wrap
your tiny hand around my throat,
size identical to your own,
for you
to feel the sounds vibrating within:
blue-ber-ry
ba-nan-a
straw-ber-ry
You
wrap your tiny hand around your throat,
size identical to my own,
for you
to mimic the vibrations
that form the consonants and the
vowels that you cannot hear.
Your
index finger with the Snoopy band-aid searches for the “r-r-r”…
blue-ber-ry?
I shake
my head. Look at my lips, I sign.
blue-ber-ry
I watch
the cherry Chapstick crack on your lips
as “blueberry” makes them
pucker.
Next,
ba-nan-a ?
Umm,
say it slower, I say. See my tongue?
You
mimic and mash “n-n-n” against the roof of your mouth
with a tentative nod and raised,
hopeful eyebrows.
Then,
straw-ber-ry?
Hand on
my hip. Hmm, remember Dr. Lane with her popsicle stick? Ahhh …
But you open too wide.
We
cover our mouths momentarily to stifle girlish giggles —
We are, after all, hard at
work.
blue-ber-ry
ba-nan-a
straw-ber-ry
and
repeat
blue-ber-ry
ba-nan-a
straw-ber-ry
and
adjust
blue-ber-ry
ba-nan-a
straw-ber-ry
and tweak
blue-ber-ry
ba-nan-a
straw-ber-ry
again
and
again
and
again
and once more
until —
fruit
never tasted
so
sweet
in
our mouths.
* * * * *
"Fruits of
Labor" about the author working with her deaf twin sister first appeared in Cerasus Magazine and will also appear in Kelly Sargent's forthcoming
poetry chapbook, Seeing Voices: Poetry in Motion (Kelsay Books, Summer 2022).
Kelly Sargent is a hard of hearing author and artist whose
works have appeared in more than forty literary publications. She is a Best of
the Net nominee, and her newest poetry chapbook entitled Seeing Voices:
Poetry in Motion is forthcoming from Kelsay Books. She wrote for a national
newspaper for the Deaf, and currently serves as the creative nonfiction editor
and an assistant nonfiction editor for two literary journals, as well as a
reviewer for an organization dedicated to making visible the artistic expression
of sexual violence survivors.
What a beautiful tribute to the innocence and devotion of childhood love between siblings. And the use of “Cherry chapstick” and “Snoopy Band-Aid” … brilliant. I even tried this out myself!
ReplyDeleteThe poem sings. Fascinating topic too.
ReplyDeleteSuch a sweet moving poem. I can see the two little girls with their hands on their throats as the hearing twin teaches the deaf twin to talk..
ReplyDeletePrecious moment of intertwining lives!!
ReplyDelete