April 9, 2020
359: Naming Ceremony
April 9, 2020
359: Naming Ceremony
Naming Ceremony
by Hafizah Geter
Read the automated transcript.
My father, who spends most of his days painting pictures, says coming home to my mother stroking out was like walking in on an affair. Bending, he demonstrates how an aneurysm hugged her to her knees. Over and over, my father draws a loss so big it is itself an inception, a story he knows better than the day his daughters were born. Every retelling different: bluer, then redder. His memory bruising the neck of whomever he can will to listen. His heart is strong. He has the receipts: a scar on his breast that I’ve cleaned like a smudge on a window. Over and over, my father draws me a picture of the crescent moon fishhooking her hospital room. He loses the story for the pleasure of finding it, his tongue the builder of a maze. I can tell you our best days weren’t glad. He’s a history whittled down to this single story. In my version, when her mind blew, boys I barely knew played Beirut, cans of Pabst crushed against their shoulders, white balls flicking into crimson solo cups, the night lost to the drawl of a far-gone gurney.
"Naming Ceremony," by Hafizah Geter, from UN-AMERICAN by Hafizah Geter, copyright © 2020 Wesleyan University Press. Used by permission of Wesleyan University Press.