Mom

I wasn’t quiet before.

I liked to talk,

especially after Little League games;

Mom would take us to get ice cream,

double scoops of Rocky Road.

When we lost, she let me get a triple scoop,

which always made me feel better.

It wasn’t the ice cream, it was the way

I could talk to her about everything.

It’s like the ice cream was

made of magic;

it let the words drift out of me.

Words about how hard

math homework is.

Words about the way

that sometimes

the boys on the playground

told Cole that he wasn’t really a boy.

We talked about cartoons and toy soldiers.

I showed her my drawings,

and she asked so many questions.

 

 

She looked and listened

with her whole body.

 

 

I guess

I should have been listening

more to her.

I didn’t know about

her problems inside.

 

 

When she left,

I felt like part of my voice

went with her.

 

 

It’s been three months since we took

her past the Golden Gate Bridge,

up and down

the roller-coaster hills

to what she says is the city’s heart,

to the hospital.

 

 

Big trees in the garden,

roses planted in a circle

around a fountain

where I threw in every penny I had.

 

 

She can talk to us on the phone,

but we can only visit her once a month.

It’s part of her treatment.

She tells me that she’s sick

on the inside.

 

 

She says that the roads

her thoughts take

are too windy for now,

and she needs help

straightening them out.

She told me the best thing I can do

is pray for her,

take care of my dad,

spend time with my grandfather

until she gets back.

 

 

When she reached down

to say goodbye one last time,

she said, I love you, Etan,

just like when she used to tuck me in

after she finished a story.

But when I opened my mouth

to say it back,

no words

came out.