Tara Zafft
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‘Invitation,’ a poem by Tara Zafft, is this week’s Sunday Showcase. In this poem, Zafft contends with the pain inherent in being a mother, a daughter, and a friend, while trying to preserve a space for her own healing and growth.
Invitation
– Tara Zafft
I call this management of self, poetry.
Sandra Cisneros
My mind is a mess with Cisneros, the clock
says two when I put the book down
lay my head down, head spinning with black coffee
and thoughts (or is it a beckoning?)
some distant whisper of a friend long silenced
a friend that says, stand naked
before the mirror, alone
examine the folds written on skin, put
there by babies and scars
on the face—turn
light on
full-blast, get out the magnifying glass and look
at the face
that won’t let itself cry because the dinner was burned
and the kids didn’t call
and I can’t find the match to those old running socks
because that is such a
petty
reason
to
cry—when the world is at war
and your friend now has cancer
and your daughter feels lost and your mother—
confused, and you?
(where is there room for you?)
you look closer, and there—by the eyes
faint hint of a smile, an invitation—to shine
on all we call—petty
sing a song to their sweetness, lay
them
down, sweetheart, the friend says
make chocolate cupcakes
with sprinkles—to honor
the broken nail, the sore ankle, the children longed for
the mother so far, far away
the soggy tofu and language you can’t speak (yet),
the friends you don’t have (yet)
the poem you haven’t written (yet)
the son who still doesn’t get that his army service
was yours too
and the wrinkled lady who still feels two
and reads her Rilke and Cisneros—to feel at home, who sometimes
forgets
to breathe—