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Baby Boy
Right now the side of his face rests against my belly, skin to skin, his warmth magnified by mine. It is a wonder, an absolute awe-filled thing, that just days ago he was on the other side of me, tucked away and unseeable, a secret. Elliot. Elliot with the head full of hair. Elliot with the fifty-eight eyelashes. Elliot with the rounded nose that dips into rounded cheeks that slope to the tiny chin that quivers when he cries, lifts when he smiles in his sleep. A landscape. Elliot. Tiny boy so like and unlike all the other boys who have been born before. So like and unlike whatever small person I imagined my own son to be. Perfection is a rare if not impossible thing, but how could he not be, right now, so young, so soft, exactly as he is here, breathing in and out, making the sounds that all mothers and fathers know as first-speak. Secrets. He is revealing them to me, unspooling them by the minute, by the number of his sighs, and they tangle around my legs and body until I am war
Sliding Doors: One Last Glance Toward Europe
We entered the Tube around 9:00 in the morning, a mass of noisy students and a few adults, taking up a section of platform. We had told the teens: "We'll start you on your journey, but you'll have to find your way back. Pay attention." The anxious ones stayed near us, the eager ones studied the green and red and blue and yellow lines on the wall map. "We'll need the Circle Line," one said, and after nodding, we passed the phrase among us like bread, or sweets, so when the train arrived, and the sliding doors opened, we all walked through them with enough nourishment and energy to know where we were going . Later, we stepped out of trams into the high Swiss landscape at Pfingstegg Station. After London, most of the kids didn't even look at the trail map. They just started up. One foot in front of the other, one sore-muscled groan after the other, a collection of revelations. We walked under rock ledges and over small streams. We talked abo
Beautiful, Emily. Are those dahlias, in the second photo? I'm just learning to identify them. If we have them here, I don't remember seeing them. I think it's too hot.
ReplyDeleteYes! Although I'm only saying that confidently because Richard below identified them as such, also. I have all these intentions of being an amateur naturalist, but I have the hardest time remembering names for some reason. I hope to remedy that in the future, perhaps with the boy (right now we are in an animal phase; I had completely forgotten about the narwhal...).
DeleteYes, beautiful. :)
ReplyDeleteLovely words and images.
ReplyDeleteThe colors are especially beautiful this time of year, aren't they?
DeleteWhat a beautiful post!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Kathleen (and I like your new photo, too!).
DeleteEmily:
ReplyDeleteI like your Haiku, and the grapes, and the zinnias, and dahlias, and you. ~ Richard ~
Awww -- thanks! :)
DeleteEspecially simple, nice, elegant.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Bill. I have every intention of getting to your posted videos soon! :)
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