A blue jay pulls his screech
across thresholds of
dawn, tripping me awake.
Somewhere, someone else will
stumble into a room built by
the inevitable, lit with sconces.
My routine gropes for its habits:
ablutions, blinds withdrawn
praise for green tea and raisin
toast; their fine job of sustenance.
The gentle illusions needed
to belie calm and perpetuity
submit their hands for
inspection. I check for
duplicity, acts of sabotage.
I scrub them anyway
using the fragrance-free
soap of low-grade anxiety.
Tai chi anyone? Carry tiger
to the mountain, then
wave hands as clouds.
Jean Eng is a painter and poet from Toronto, Ontario. Her writing has appeared in literary journals from Canada, the U.S. and U.K. These include Canadian Literature, Contemporary Verse 2, Vallum, Grain and Stand. A debut collection of poetry is forthcoming from Inanna Publications in Fall 2020.
2 comments
I love the poem- so full of love and the sweet sadness of loss and memory.
Lillian
I love your poem as well, how we try to use those small moments of routine to recover our equilibrium, when it’s been irrevocably disrupted.