27 Powers

Monday, August 01, 2005

the great unpacking

goodness knows
there were things she'd had to let go of -
"what to keep and what to throw away,"
is how her friend put it, stumbling in the midst
of motherhood and marriage,
those twin parentheses of security
formatting even her dark days.

but this was not that same excision.
this was paperbacks and photos and mementos
of everything that had managed, somehow,
to make the final cut.
this was dishware, old poetry, and wire sculptures.
this was starfish, a basketball trophy, and costumes.
this was a tape collection, a glue gun, pjs.

this was not an unhinging, a cyclone
of irretrievable loss, a catacylsm of memory.
this required only
a cup of strong coffee,
patience
and a little shelf space.

and though her back was taut with the move,
her hands a swamp of paper cuts and ache,
her head juggling the measurements of storage,
through it all, her heart had remained
blissfully, unreservedly
intact.

and because of this reprieve
from all the possible shatteredness
she saw the pile from the perch of her coffee cup
and realized how easy she had it,
her great unpacking the simplest matter
of boxes.

2 Comments:

  • I think you read my mind! That was me, yesterday, on my front porch, with postcards from places visited, my coffepot of 20 years, love letters from old boyfriends (courageously tossed out, I might add), financial plans yet to do, fertility information, stacks of it, vacations to put on the list of to-do's. What a process.

    By Blogger Andrea, at 8/01/2005 10:40 AM  

  • After three trips to the giant recycling center with more bags of papers and reports and evidence that I used to have a different life, I read this. Yes, the lightness is worth it. Thanks for the added reminder!

    By Blogger Onecheek Girl, at 8/09/2005 11:25 AM  

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