pixabay photo
By
Abigail George
Even when my soul sleeps or studies and observations of clouds
It is a hot, dry summer with water restrictions.
Our parents and you thought rehab was necessary.
Let go of the world (I want to tell
you. All is a majority. Even this pigment. This
gold feast of peace). Once we were
made of water but who made up these rules.
We followed them like fools growing up.
The kingdom of God is within. I have
finally left childhood radiance behind.
Spiritual maturity is when we become
like the Christ-figure. I hope they are
teaching you that where you are. It’s
summer. Days of thunder. The unseen
is eternal. I am listening to your music.
Lying on your bed. Barefoot. My feet
are dirty. You’re not here. You’re here
but you’re also not here. You’re in rehab
and we’re all made of water and rain.
Tears a waterfall. I think of the dirty
dishes I must wash. The stories I must
read to your son. The garden I must
water for your sake. That has been your ‘sanctuary’
after all these months. How before you
left you could never sleep at night.
Are you growing spiritually, I wonder?
I think of you in your sadness. Silence
closing in on your loneliness. Daylight.
The cold in the morning hitting your face.
Summer touching you as you work outside. Your limbs gaining vigour
and perspective. I guess there’s order in
that kind of routine. I am in need of
crayons to colour you in. Your passion.
Your history. Your progress. Your borders.
Your trembling voice as you talk to your son.
I miss your shortbread. You riding around
in your car with young goddesses who
wear too much makeup. Drinking single
malt whiskies and vodka and pineapple
juice but you’ll have to stop doing that.
You’ll really have to stop doing that. And I wonder,
if you’ll make it after all when you come home.
Journey into the centre of summer
My father, the artist, sleeps
the sleep of the dead in the hot afternoon.
In this house, we do nothing but
sleep and eat. Live to survive
another day like the winter leaf finding
refuge in the blue light. We find our way through
instinct. I kiss his old, tired-looking
face. Tell him to take the cup by
the handle. Everything goes electric
when he cannot walk. Make it to the
bathroom. I see it in his eyes. He can’t
believe he’s old. I repair him with
food. I’m not a good cook but I try.
Making mostly pastas. Making mostly
spaghetti. I count out his pills. Iron his handkerchiefs
for church. He has one good suit.
Wonder if (the pills) they’re really doing any
good for him. His limbs play up.
Sometimes they’re invincible. Sometimes
not. My father, the poet, is a gentle-
man. The wet stain of trees against his
fingertips. He knits flesh in his hands.
I think of my father as a young man. Doing research
for his doctoral thesis. Traveling from
archive to archive. I think of my own journey.
Journey into the centre of this summer.
Then I am sad and I think to myself is
this the last summer that we’ll spend together
as father-daughter. This thin sea in my hands.
The tide in my hands. The current
telling me to step back from the strange, silent sunshine
of the day. There are glass fragments
in my heart and evening swallows, a
Chinese dragon breathing fire, and
I’m turning the page. I’m turning the page.
I give up this day to the rain. I am
standing on a diving board. I am standing on a diving board but nothing
feels real to me. I think of J.’s guitar. I think of S. and her frail deeds.
Her wheelchair. I think of water. The radio
which has become so sacred to us. Leftovers.
M on social media. Antelope that linger.
Abigail George
Pushcart Prize nominee Abigail George is a South African-based blogger, essayist, poet and short story writer. She briefly studied film at the Newtown Film and Television School followed by a stint at a production company in Johannesburg. She has received two writing grants from the National Arts Council in Johannesburg, one from the Centre for the Book in Cape Town, and another from ECPACC in East London. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Aerodrome,Africanwriter.com, Bluepepper, Dying Dahlia Review, ELJ, Entropy, Fourth and Sycamore, Gnarled Oak,Hackwriters.com, Itch, LitNet, Mortar Magazine, Off the Coast, Ovi Magazine: Finland’s English Online Magazine, Peeking Cat Poetry Magazine, Piker Press, Praxis Magazine Online, Sentinel Literary Quarterly, Spontaneity, The New York Review, and Vigil Pub Mag. She has been published in various anthologies, numerous times in print in South Africa, and online in zines based in Australia, Canada, Finland, India, Ireland, the UK, the United States, across Africa from Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, Turkey and Zimbabwe.
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