Ode to a Tearful Dishwasher (blog: The Dishwasher's Tears
This is for the man who stands at the sink, 
who forgets he’s washing dishes,
who forgets he’s a man,  a father, a son, 
husband.  This is for the man who stands
at the sink, rapt at the illusion:  His hands 
severed  at the wrists by suds dying 
slow deaths in the dishpan is so convincing 
that he briefly misses each finger 
and wonders how he’ll live without being 
able to touch ever again.  This is for the man 
who stands at the sink crying as he rinses 
a plate, yet the cold water rushing over skin  
and porcelain does not wake him from his reverie; 
he is Helen Keller putting it all together, 
the secret is being spelled out in his hands right here, 
right now. Every breath is a small epiphany;
he breathes because he can’t not.  He breathes
because he can.  His are not tears of grief.  
From where he stands at the sink, he can see 
the full moon rising.   He can hear his wife waiting 
in the living room  as he places the last plate 
in the rack and dumps the dirty water down the drain.
Saturday, January 21, 2006
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3 comments:
Good read. I wonder what Scott would think of this, especially with his work. I like the ending, what it says about life in general.
Helm.
I've read two and it's two for two in mind blowing poems. Excellent, Laurel, just excellent!
wowwwww....i love this!
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