A curated webspace for Poetry, Politics, and Nature with over 20,000 daily subscribers and over 8,000 archived posts.
The only time
I had a police escort
was your birth. The pains
hit 3 minutes apart.
I called Dad home. Why
didn’t I take a cab?
Mrs. Headley asked
how I could be so calm,
breathing deep, riding
with the contractions.
Dad called the police
so we wouldn’t get stuck
in the Liberty Tubes.
Tie a handkerchief
to the antenna, they said.
Blue lights flashing
off the tunnel walls, sirens
echoing, we burst out
of the dark. What a relief,
to be on the bridge
downtown gleaming
across the river. I made it
in time, and you made it
by kicking and tearing
right through the canal,
no problems–for you.
Dr. Carol loused up
the episiotomy. I went back
to be re-sutured.
But you had all your holes
in the right places.
—
copyright 2014 by Peter Blair
published by permission of the author
Peter Blair
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.
Peter, this is a moving poem and captures the tenderness hidden just below the angst. You have such a way of seeing and conveying your experience. I’ve enjoyed reading your work.
LikeLike