Sharon Waller Knutson is a retired journalist who lives in Arizona. She has
published ten poetry books including My Grandmother Smokes Chesterfields (Flutter
Press 2014,) What the Clairvoyant Doesn’t Say and Trials &
Tribulations of Sports Bob (Kelsay Books 2021) and Survivors, Saints
and Sinners and Kiddos & Mamas Do the Darndest Things (Cyberwit 2022) and
The Vultures Are Circling (Cyberwit 2023) Her work has
also appeared recently in Discretionary Love, Impspired, GAS Poetry, Art
and Music, The Rye Whiskey Review, Black Coffee Review,
Terror House Review, Trouvaille Review, ONE ART, Mad Swirl,
The Drabble, Gleam, Spillwords, Muddy River Review, Verse-Virtual,
Your Daily Poem, Red Eft Review and The Five-Two.
These poems are from her book, The Leading Ladies of My Life, forthcoming from Cyberwit.
I Want Something Live I Tell Santa
It
is Christmas 1944
when
I am almost three.
I
open a box and find a lifeless doll
instead
of a live baby brother
or
sister that my parents
had
been promising me for seven months.
I
throw the doll on the floor and pout.
Why
couldn’t you put what’s in your tummy
in
the box so I’d have something live
to
play with?
I ask. We could put it back.
Mama
and Daddy just laugh.
Feb.
24, 1945
I
have to admit, when they place
the
scarlet faced squalling baby
in
my lap, I wish I had a puppy
instead,
because he would lick
my
face but when my baby sister
looks
up at me with her big
brown
eyes and stares at me
like
I am her everything, I become
her
smitten slave and although
sometimes
she stinks and vomits
up
white stuff on my clean clothes,
I
still don’t want to put her back
where
she came from.
Although
she doesn’t attend church,
our
mother always sends us to Sunday
School
and Bible School in the summer.
Maybe
that is why she named
my
sister Judith, meaning
"Woman of Judea” in Hebrew.
Judy,
as we call her, bawls
all
the time and I am blamed.
What
did you do to make her cry?
my father shouts. She bawls louder.
She
cries because she is a bawl
baby,
I
say and he sighs.
Just
be nice to your baby sister.
Getting
the Royal Treatment
My
grandmother is named
Anna
after Anne Boleyn
and
Tolstoy’s Anna Karina
which
may explain why
she
expects royal treatment.
When
I ride the Greyhound
from
Montana to Idaho to visit
my
grandmother, the first thing
I
see when the bus pulls
into
the station is the blue bird
perched
on my grandmother’s hat.
She
squints in the sun, wearing
a
flowered dress to match
her
hat and sensible shoes.
We
walk down the sidewalk
to
the shoe store where she plops
down
in a chair and summons
the
clerk with a flick of her wrist
to
bring her box after box of shoes
which
she rejects as too big,
too
small or unattractive.
The
clean-shaven young clerk
obeys
her command but behind
her
back points to the bird on her hat
and
covers his mouth to suppress
snickers,
which she never hears,
but
I do. I with ears sharp
enough
to hear birds chirping outside
despite
the canned pop music blasting
inside
the air-conditioned store.
Even
though he makes fun
of
my grandmother, I buy
a
pair of tennis shoes
because
I know Anna
is
not in the store to buy shoes.
Her
closet is too crowded.
She
is there to be waited on
and
treated like the Queen
she
believes herself to be.
Taking Care of Emma
Emma
means whole or universal
which
may explain
why
my maternal grandmother
is
my everything.
She
is a heroine to me
even
before I learn
of
Emma of Normandy,
and
Jane Austin’s Emma,
which
is why I always stop
at
her house on my way home
from
school.to check on her
after
Grandpa dies and she is alone.
One
afternoon, I take a different
route
where I pick up bread
at
the bakery and milk and eggs
at
the downtown grocery store.
As
I reach for my pajamas,
I
sense my grandmother
is
in danger and needs me.
Go
to bed,
my father says
and
yells: You are grounded,
as
I grab my coat and rush
out
into the cold winter air
and
run to the end of the block.
There
I see flashing lights
on
an ambulance parked
in
front of my grandmother’s
house
and race to her rescue.
Broken
hip,
the x-rays show.
Nursing
Home,
the doctor says.
My
grandmother shivers and shakes.
I’ll
take care of her,
I volunteer.
I
pack my bags and move in,
And
after I poach her eggs
and
make her coffee, mother
shows
up and I go to school.
When
Grandma is walking,
we
take care of each other
until
my father insists
I
move back home.
We
hug and hold back tears.
I don’t want to go, I say.
Your
father is the boss, she says.
I
want you to stay but I’ll be fine.
My Mother is a Marvel
I never knew anyone named Marvel
except my mother and whenever
I mention Marvel Naomi Marvin
was my mother’s birth name,
I am besieged with giggles
so I imagine even in the early 1900s
she was bullied and teased.
My mother is truly a Marvel.
meaning to wonder and admire,
as
she rises in the morning
before
my sister, father and me, slips
into
the bathroom to apply liquid
makeup,
lipstick and mascara
and
long after we are in bed
and
after my father falls to sleep,
she
sneaks back into the bathroom
and
smooths Ponds Cold Cream
all
over her face and with cotton
balls
erases all trace of color.
I
never use soap on my face, she says.
Makeup
applied to perfection,
hair
ratted and secured by a scarf,
in
her early eighties but looking sixty,
she
sits in the passenger seat
of
the bronze Lincoln as I drive
her
to the specialist in Salt Lake City
after
she says she can’t make out
shapes
of faces. Macular Degeneration,
he
diagnoses. She never winces
or
complains of pain on the six-hour drive
but
the next day she stops at the top
of
the stairs carrying the clothes basket
I
want to hang the sheets on the line
but
my back hurts too bad,
she says.
The
general practitioner takes x-rays
and
sends her home. She is still
wearing
her makeup and dress
from
the doctor’s visit when I find
her
lying on her back on the sofa.
I
can’t get up. The pain is unbearable,
she
says. Every bone in her back is broken
from
the bone cancer, the doctor says.
Should
I call an ambulance?
I ask
and
he answers yes. But when we get
to
the hospital, the administrator says:
No
beds. Take her home.
I bite my lip
to
keep from screaming, while my mother,
the
Marvel that she is, lies calm and quiet
on
the gurney. A paramedic squeezes
my
hand and whispers, I’ll handle this.
He
turns to the administrator and says:
May
I have a word?
and they disappear
behind
closed doors. The door opens
and
my mother is given the bed
of
a patient who is in surgery. What
if
he is too weak to go home? she frets.
I
never see my mother without makeup
until
I walk into her hospital room
where
she lies, hiding her naked face
and
the oncologist hoping for healing
but
not promising handing her chemo pills.
She
refuses the I-V chemo to protect
the
loss of her thick head of hair.
I
don’t recognize the old woman
with
the oatmeal mush complexion,
naked
pale lips and no eyebrows.
shrinking
in the sheets.
She
gestures towards her purse.
Help
me put on my makeup.
My
baby brother is coming to visit.
The
bones heal and with the help
of
a walker, she gets along fine
for
a few years until the cancer
returns
and repeated chemo
weakens
her heart and she falls
in
the closet searching for her cat
and
breaks her leg, After the surgery,
she
is confused and doesn’t know
where
she is and why her nurse’s
aide
is missing. Terri is back, she chirps
the
last day we speak.
She
is going to spend the night
and
shampoo and curl my hair.
She
dies that night just hours
before
the doctor arrives to
deliver
the news that the cancer
is
in remission again and write
the
order to transfer
her
to a nursing home.
Such wonderful and vivid characters!! And there's always such a sense of understanding and support between these women, mothers, daughters, grandmothers, granddaughters!
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