August 28, 2020
460: American Mother
August 28, 2020
460: American Mother
American Mother
by Pamela Hart
There was the time I told your cradle I was done Locked you in the van then shopped at Walgreens I didn’t feed you vegetables I let the car slide into the lake, watched you drown and blamed Medea I held each of you one by one under the porcelain water Dozed as a man who wasn’t your father broke your arm I slapped your faces when your grades failed When you were arrested I denied you were mine I confess to being the mother of all bombs Sometimes I disdained you I confess I am not good Sometimes the sound of the hawk Chasing after the crow was the only thing I cared about But I learned the word fontanel Buried my face in the soft spot and oh the smell The world of your skin the first morning after the night of your birth Even the landscape of the heel of your day-old foot The day gone to sleep and breast—your mouth opening Then closing as if to tell me the story of what you saw—light Glinting off a window and into your face—my Large face like the ocean you would later swim in Even as I love you and hold all of you My children I’m the good mother the bad mother The one who makes you Then bombs your world to bits
"American Mother," by Pamela Hart, from MOTHERS OVER NANGARHAR by Pamela Hart, copyright © 2017 Sarabande Books. Used by permission of Sarabande Books.