The operator puts me on hold

  while she pages him.

  I put the phone on speaker,

  to free up my hands

  so I can try to get some writing done

  while I wait.

  But it’s hard to write a poem—

  no, it’s impossible to write a poem

  while listening to a voice that keeps asking you,

  over and over again, to please stay on the line,

  assuring you,

  as the centuries tick by,

  that your call

  is very important to them.

  DR. HACK FINALLY GETS ON THE LINE

  He tells me the good news

  is that the steroids are helping—

  my mother’s getting stronger

  and seems to be in less pain.

  Then he tells me

  the bad news:

  she’s having

  a severe roid rage reaction.

  “I know,” I say. “It’s awful.

  Isn’t there anything that can be done about it?”

  “Hmmm…” he says. “Maybe we could try

  putting up a NO BITING ALLOWED sign…”

  And then he starts chuckling

  at his own idiotic joke.

  Only this

  is no ordinary chuckle—

  this is a piercing

  Woody-Woodpecker-esque cackle

  that practically ruptures

  my eardrums.

  I TELL DR. HACK THAT SOMEONE’S AT THE DOOR

  Then I hang up

  and stagger into the backyard,

  trying to shake the echo of that awful chuckle

  out of my head.

  I suck in a breath.

  I let it out.

  Suck in another breath.

  Let it out.

  I stand here watching the sun stream

  through our pepper tree’s swaying arms,

  savoring the silence emanating from

  the vacant house next door.

  Ever since the neighbors moved away last year,

  there’ve been no barking dogs,

  no screaming fights,

  no Lady Gaga…

  Maybe I’ll dash into the house,

  bring my computer out here,

  climb right up into our pepper tree’s lap,

  and finally get some writing done.

  BUT…

  The instant I step inside to grab my laptop,

  the phone rings.

  And wouldn’t you just know it?

  It’s Roxie calling. For a progress report.

  I consider coming clean

  and admitting that I’ve ground to a halt—

  because of my sick mom and my night sweats

  and my soon-to-be empty nest.

  I even consider telling her

  how distracted I’ve been

  by the forest of witchy white hairs

  that’s just started sprouting on my chin.

  Though, honestly—

  how can someone barely past puberty

  even begin to understand

  what I’m going through?

  So I don’t bother explaining.

  I just tell her I’m making excellent progress.

  Then I say a breezy good-bye,

  hang up the phone,

  and pray that God won’t strike me dead.

  BUT ROXIE’S CALL HAS FREAKED ME OUT

  Desperate for inspiration,

  I grab one of my old journals

  and, flipping through the pages,

  find an entry written on Sam’s third birthday:

  Today she marched in,

  dragging Monkey behind her.

  “Mommy,” she said, “am I three?”

  “Yes,” I told her. “You are three.”

  The next entry was just two days later:

  This morning she said,

  “Mommy, am I still three?”

  “Yes,” I told her. “You are still three.”

  She blinked at me solemnly,

  then said, “Is my whole body three?”

  “Yes,” I told her.

  “Your whole body is three.”

  I close the journal

  and glance at my neck in the mirror.

  “Yes,” I tell myself. “You are still fifty.”

  Then I take a step back and peer at the rest of me.

  “Yes,” I say. “Your whole body is fifty.”

  EVEN MY HAIR IS FIFTY…

  In case you are wondering

  why I’m wearing this hat:

  There’s hair in my sink,

  hair in my tub,

  hair on my floor,

  hair in my grub,

  hair on my clothes,

  hair in my bed.

  Plenty of hair

  everywhere—

  except for

  on my head.

  MY KNEES ARE FIFTY, TOO

  This never used to happen.

  My knees never used to issue a formal

  complaint whenever I knelt down.

  But they do now.

  These days,

  when I lower myself to the ground,

  I’ve got more snap, crackle, and pop

  than a bowl of Rice Krispies.

  Yesterday, at the library,

  when I squatted down

  to peruse the titles on the bottom shelf,

  everyone in the room turned to see

  what was causing the commotion.

  FOR CHRISSAKE–

  MAYBE THIS IS HOW IT WILL HAPPEN:

  One day,

  while you and your little girl

  are feeding the ducks

  in the pond,

  you’ll glance over

  and think to yourself,

  There are the old people,

  lawn bowling.

  The next day,

  you’ll find yourself

  standing amongst them,

  all of you clothed in white

  from head to toe,

  like clusters of calla lilies

  blooming on the lush green pelt

  of lawn.

  You’ll line up your shot,

  aim the ball at the jack, and let it roll

  in a sort of slow-motion

  dream-sequence move.

  Then you’ll glance over

  and think to yourself,

  There is a young mother and her little girl,

  feeding the ducks.

  IS THIS HOW IT WAS FOR YOU?

  When you were

  almost fourteen,

  your body blooming faster

  than a time-lapse film of a flower,

  did you stroll down the street

  hoping that all the boys who saw you

  would be so blown away by your beauty

  that’d they’d burst into applause?

  Did you go from wishing more than anything

  that someone would whistle at you,

  to being whistled at

  every now and then,

  to being whistled at

  so often that you took it for granted,

  to being whistled at

  less,

  to rarely

  being whistled at,

  to never

  being whistled at,

  to wishing more than anything

  that someone would whistle at you

  just

  one

  more

  time?

  HOW DO U NO WHEN UR OLD?

  Well, you are old

  if you had trouble understanding

  the title of this poem.

  You are old

  if you have no idea who that person is

  who’s hosting Saturday Night Live.

  You are old

  if before you head off

  on your morning run

  you find yourself

  tucking your husband’s

  cell phone number into your pocket


  so that the paramedics

  will know

  who to call.

  SO I’M FEELING A LITTLE SAD TODAY

  I spent half the morning

  talking to my mother’s doctor

  and her nurse and the physical therapist

  and Blue Cross Blue Shield,

  and the other half

  talking to Samantha’s guidance counselor

  and her transcript clerk and the College Board

  and the financial aid office.

  Now, it’s three o’clock in the afternoon.

  I’m still wearing my tattered old nightgown.

  I haven’t had time to brush my teeth

  or make the bed

  or spritz on my Rogaine

  or take my biotin

  or my calcium or my vitamin D

  or to write one single syllable.

  I’m as hollow

  as an empty cave,

  as flattened as a suckled breast,

  as useless as an uninspired muse.

  But contrary to what you might have guessed,

  I’m not just a little depressed—

  I’ve got a mean case

  of the sandwich generation blues.

  KITCHEN QUARREL

  I’m scarfing down a late lunch

  when Michael wanders into the room,

  pulls open the fridge,

  and asks me if we have any eggs.

  He asks me this question even though

  the eggs are right there in plain sight—

  right there on the door of the fridge

  where they always are,

  where they always have been

  for the past five years

  ever since we bought this fridge

  that came with the built-in egg holder.

  Even so, I don’t tell Michael

  that I think this is a dumb question.

  I just tell him that the eggs are on the door.

  But Michael gets mad at me anyway.

  He says it was not a dumb question.

  And I say I never said it was.

  And he says well, it was obvious from your tone

  that you thought it was a dumb question.

  And I say it isn’t fair for him

  to get angry at me for having a thought.

  And he says I’m wrong about that

  and I say I’m right and he says I’m wrong

  and I say I’m right and he says I’m wrong,

  and finally I tell him that I’ve really

  got to stop now, and then he clears his throat

  and says that same pissy thing he always says,

  about my not wanting to concede the point,

  and I say, “You know I can’t stand it

  when you say that!” and he says,

  “That’s because you know it’s true!”

  And I’m just about to strangle him,

  really, I am,

  when Samantha arrives home

  from her chorus rehearsal.

  Thus, sparing Michael’s life.

  BUT I SHUDDER TO THINK ABOUT NEXT YEAR

  I mean,

  what will happen

  when Samantha isn’t here

  to shame us into behaving like grown-ups?

  Who will keep us

  from tearing each other limb from limb?

  Maybe we could get a court reporter

  to move in with us…

  She’d record every single word

  Michael and I said to each other—

  her silver hair pulled up into a neat brioche

  on top of her head,

  rocking ever so slightly, her eyes closed

  in Ray-Charlesian concentration,

  her quick fingers clicking quietly away

  on the keys of her stenotype machine

  while the ticker tape transcript,

  that oozing ribbon of absolute truth,

  gathered in white-looped paper mountains

  around her primly crossed ankles.

  Her presence in our home

  would doubtless cut in half

  the length of time Michael and I

  spend arguing.

  Whenever our fights escalated

  to the you-know-I-can’t-stand-it-

  when-you-say-that stage, Michael would

  protest (as usual), “I didn’t say that!”

  But there she’d be,

  our intrepid court reporter,

  to check back through her tape

  and set him straight.

  “Actually,” she’d say,

  glancing at him coolly over the top

  of her tortoise shell spectacles,

  “your exact words were…”

  WHERE I GET MY IDEAS

  The couple doesn’t notice me,

  as I pause to watch

  their embrace

  in the beach parking lot.

  He’s younger, shirtless,

  with broad cinnamon shoulders,

  his slim waist circled

  by jeans the color of the sea.

  She’s older, in a tailored white blouse,

  her French twist blonded by an expert,

  her slim waist circled

  by jeans the color of the sand.

  They’re melting into each other

  like figures in a sculpture by Rodin…

  It’s seven in the morning,

  so I figure this is a good-bye hug.

  But now the man

  takes the woman’s hand and leads her

  toward a plain stucco bungalow

  that borders the parking lot.

  He pulls her inside,

  locks the rusted screen door

  behind them,

  then yanks down the blinds.

  But it’s as though I can still see them—

  see them tearing off each other’s jeans.

  I fling myself onto a nearby bench

  and fever their story into my notebook…

  Maybe this is a tryst

  they’ve been planning for weeks.

  He wasn’t sure she’d show up.

  But here she is…

  Or maybe

  she comes to him like this

  every morning,

  before she goes to work…

  Maybe

  he’s her tennis coach,

  her mailman, her masseur…

  Maybe he wakes up hard thinking of her…

  Maybe he smoothes

  the sand out of his bed,

  whispering her name

  like a prayer…

  She’s deathly married,

  but these visits to her lover’s

  dank bunker by the water,

  these visits are what keep her breathing.

  As long as he wants her,

  everything will be okay.

  He can have her as long as he wants her,

  for as long as he wants,

  as long as he wants

  to rip off her blouse,

  pull down her panties,

  and do it standing up in the kitchen…

  Because oh God

  when he looks at her like that

  he brings her back

  to life…

  His scent, his skin, his lips…

  She needs them…

  now…

  now…

  like the thundering wave

  needs the beach,

  like the throbbing vein

  needs blood…

  AND SPEAKING OF BLOOD

  Or lack

  thereof.

  When I look back

  on my periods

  I can remember

  having the distinct sensation

  that my belly was full

  of good rich soil.

  Earth, nutrients, fragrant blood,

  all of it swirled within me,

  all of it thirsting

  for a sprinkling of fresh seed.

  BUT THAT’S NOT HOW I DE
SCRIBED IT TO MY DAUGHTER

  She wasn’t quite eight years old

  when she came to me one afternoon

  clutching Monkey in one hand

  and some tampons in the other.

  She’d found them

  in our medicine cabinet

  and she wanted to know

  what the little white tubes were for.

  Ignoring the flock of butterflies

  flittering in my stomach,

  I swallowed hard, then spun the same

  yarn my mother had spun for me—

  all about

  how lucky she was to be a girl

  because only girls

  can make babies!

  And that as soon as she became a teenager

  her body would know exactly what to do:

  once a month, her belly would weave a nest,

  just in case a baby came—

  a nest that would be

  a nice cozy place

  for the seedling child

  to grow.