The Toll

after
a ten-hour work day
between
flossing teeth
and rinsing Tupperware
there was
a moment
glowing golden
evening
a low lit living room
tidy
first load of laundry
folded
full moon outside
rising
Jeb in the shower
dripping
“Mom, can you hand me my towel?”
the Bohemian in his chair
smiling
a mouthful of cashew fruit
juicing
Sudoku “Medium”
sharpened pencil (no eraser)
in his hands

oh the lunacy
and all the scurrying
my monkey mind
keeping time
with all these
beautiful
and ridiculous
earthlings
ling
a ling
ring
a ding
somewhere
there must be
oh please
a bell
that’s waking
us

in my room
there reverberates
one wet and slippery eight-year old
one puzzle solving, fruit-loving man
and soft light
shining warmly
across the maple wood floor
resonating
settling
ringing me
home

 

photo courtesy of Nomadic Lass

 

Family Tree

At sunset we have a ceremonial tree planting.

The Bohemian dug the hole. Mary chose the tree (a hearty, up-and-coming mango). We all gather to move the soil and make our wishes.

Three boys (eight, seven and four and a half) jostle about to take turns with shovels, rakes and the hose. Bare feet dodge horse manure, our mango tree’s best friend.

Mary sprinkles Spirulina powder at the root base and the green dust catches the breeze to swirl in ritualistic smoke against the sunset sky.

This tree has been given everything it needs to thrive in the corner of the field. Once it is all tucked in and watered, the boys wander away from the sapling to some new point of interest near the garden. But the adults stay to gaze upon this green-leafed embodiment of potential. We offer hopes of big juicy fruit. Imagine thick branches holding children of the future.

I see the shade it will one day cast stretching out to shield a vast section of the pasture. Its roots holding the story of this planting. It is our family tree.

“Its going to outlive us all,” says Mary.

And nothing feels more right.

 

Jessica Dofflemyer ~ all rights reserved