March 08, 2007

Red-Blooded

At the last ultrasound we delighted
in the clarity with which we could see
tiny fingers. And the miraculous spine,
with its successively smaller bones,
each in its place, lined up in perfect formation.
Dizzy with relief and anticipation,
we decided to go ahead and hear the news
and the news was, "It's a boy."
My next thought was less a thought
than a seizure, a rearranging at the cellular level:
someone will want to send him to fight.
It was a kind of crossing over.

Our sons are four and five now,
we mothers who nursed with our backs
to the television, trying in vain
to keep those towers upright
through an act of willful denial.
We used to listen to the news
on the kitchen radio in the morning,
but now, if we have it on at all, we hover,
ready to spin that dial down to zero
as the telltale phrases begin:
Today in Fallujah. This morning on the outskirts
of Najaf. Yesterday, in the northern city of Mosul...
Roadside. Suicide. The bombs are everywhere.
Only our quick wrists save us.

No escape is possible, of course.
A friend's ex gives her boy camouflage pajamas.
My boy wants to save his money to buy a toy
that transforms into a battle station.
They thunder overhead, our red-blooded
American boys, feeling the pull of power.
We mothers sit downstairs and talk,
all the while keeping an ear out
for the moment when the game goes awry.
When the cry of real pain comes,
you may experience shortness of breath,
or a tightening in the chest.

(Thanks to the women of Poetry Thursday
for their continuing inspiration.
I don't always participate in the Poetry Thursday prompt,
but when I do, I am often an early contributor. Not so today.)

8 comments:

Unknown said...

Such a powerful take on this idea.
I've also worked on a similar theme in the past, perhaps a bit more vehemently:

http://colorful-prose.com/planting-seeds/

rel said...

Shelly,This is so heartfelt. Proud yet worried. Knowing human nature for what it is and even so trying to limit it's influence.
As a Vietnam vet, I too ried to minimize my kids exposure to war images. So much so that we would nver buy toy weapons or even camo clothes. My daughter and one of my sons served in the 1st Gulf war.
rel

angie said...

Nice, conversational style and cool title. I don't do guns, but my guys (oldest is 4) see them other places and can hardly contain their interest. What to do?

So many things now are thought of in context of those towers. I found out I was pregnant about a month after they fell. My goodness.

Happy wishes to you!

Norma said...

The only poem I am aware that my grandmother wrote is about having 3 sons in the service during WWII. I doubt that they ever had a toy gun--or any toy, for that matter.

Stacy said...

So very well said. The thing, I guess, is to build strong hearts for our boys and hope that the rest follows. But sometimes it's too scary to even contemplate. And it might be someone else's child who is hurt, or worse, and that seems to be what we have forgotten. They are all someone's baby, each and every one of them.

Kimberley McGill said...

This is powerful!

I have seen everything from little girls purses to a child's party decorations in camouflage - it makes me sad.

jillypoet said...

I really like how you move so quickly from delight to concern just in the first stanza. So true. So true. I was 9 months pregnant with a boy the morning the towers fell. My first thought, what kind of world am I bringing you into little man? I wouldn't have a gun in the house if were my choice, in-laws are another story. As G. says, what to do? Throw them away when no-one is looking, or in your beautiful words, hover, flick the wrist, turn the tv off, radio down. Such a great poem!

Mary J. said...

Oh my god. I wasn't expecting this. It is well done, with some great lines - "our quick wrists."

Good poem. Thanks for sharing.