All Kinds of Love Poetry

DETONATION

Outside the doctor’s office, my son lays curled 

on the floorboards of my van, 

red and constricted as a crab, 

the windows of the car absorbing sunlight 

as though we lay inside a crystal, sweat

and tears at his hairline, the ravine of curls 

gathered to his shoulders like a bouquet. 

Brushing aside his hair, I trace the rash on his shoulder,

colorless, the shape of Kansas, raised bumps 

in formation like a cornfield. Slugs of snot stream 

from his nostrils as he screams, Fix it. 

Fix my shoulder. No doctor! 

 

The humidity in the car crushes our bodies 

like a pressure cooker, and I imagine bringing him

inside the office, beneath my arm like a football, 

the drum of his ribcage in my elbow,

the percussion of his screams in the tidy waiting area, 

the jungle gym of primary colors, Highlights Magazines 

stacked on the side tables, and our presence in the office 

like a hurricane. His sobs would dampen my T shirt,

my hands to his back, the thermal landscape 

of his scalp, clutching him to me in my desire

to fix – fix the patch on his shoulder raised like Braille,

fix the nights he must spend at his father’s, 

the way he curls into me when he comes home 

every week, his wet mouth to my shoulder, 

just as he would in the doctor’s office,

my arms around his torso as though holding us together

against detonation, the way I would fix everything 

that hurt him, if I could. 

 

But I cannot: so I sink to the floorboards

over his body, its tremulous form, kneeled 

as though praying, his feet curled like a heart, 

my palm to his spine, to absorb his distress.

I remind myself of better days, 

as I hold space for his wails 

on the floor of the van that blisters, swells with heat 

like a ventricle. We rock together, the breeze

through the cracked door lapping away his agitation,

his confusion slowing as the first hiccup

of rain speckles my windshield, 

spattering on the roof of the car

like a tin can, my son’s wide fox eyes rising 

in wonder, mouth open, the tears under his eyes gleaming,

stilled, the heat within the van broken like a spell.

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