the thirty eighth year

of my life,

plain as bread

round as a cake

an ordinary woman.

an ordinary woman.

i had expected to be

smaller than this,

more beautiful,

wiser in afrikan ways,

more confident,

i had expected

more than this.

i will be forty soon.

my mother once was forty.

my mother died at forty four,

a woman of sad countenance

leaving behind a girl

awkward as a stork.

my mother was thick,

her hair was a jungle and

she was very wise

and beautiful

and sad.

i have dreamed dreams

for you mama

more than once.

i have wrapped me

in your skin

and made you live again

more than once.

i have taken the bones you hardened

and built daughters

and they blossom and promise fruit

like afrikan trees.

i am a woman now.

an ordinary woman.

in the thirty eighth

year of my life,

surrounded by life,

a perfect picture of

blackness blessed,

i had not expected this

loneliness.

if it is western,

if it is the final

europe in my mind,

if in the middle of my life

i am turning the final turn

into the shining dark

let me come to it whole

and holy

not afraid

not lonely

out of my mother’s life

into my own.

into my own.

i had expected more than this.

i had not expected to be

an ordinary woman.