A Red Umbrella in the Sun

I got a manicure in a nice salon for my birthday. I’d promised myself I’d quit a 41-year-old habit. Then I glanced out the window.

Red Umbrella

The technician submerges
my hands in the lavender
water to soften my chewed-on skin.
My fingers flex, the water stings the wounds.
Each sore a metronome of the hum inside.
Too ashamed to relax, I do everything
but close my eyes.
Count towels.
Searching for pores, maybe a frizzy tendril
on the model’s giant face beside me.
I crane my neck to look out the window,
and I see a red umbrella, swaying like a
heartbeat in the brutal sun.
The umbrella tips, and I see him, his sign,
a small board cupped in his left hand:
MEALS.
The sunlight shifts, and
my own reflection hovers in the glass.
The technician massages chamomile lotion
into my skin.
“For relaxation.”
“Is the AC temperature okay, ma’am?”

I stare at the man and his red umbrella
until he walks out of sight.
I ask for red polish
on my fingertips.
I ask the technician if she gets to visit
her family, so far away.
I murmur another apology about my fingers.
The red polish, cured under light.

Even So, I Don’t Deserve My Mattress

I don’t deserve the soft
mattress I sprawl across each morning. 
Letting my 40-year joints stitch themselves back together.
But most nights,
it’s what I’ve said wrong that keeps me awake. 

In fact, I would say
none of us who have
soft mattresses deserve them. 
We didn’t earn them.
Just luck.

We are born lucky. 
A devoted family, a country not
torn to shreds by war.
Food in the kitchen;
no bloated bellies except when 
we eat too much junk. 
So why does sorrow still
creep in?

I find the wrong in small, small things,
and they sour like curd left to set too 
long in the heat.
They blister my nerves.
I become a pulsing mass,
pushing past the ammoomma
parked sideways in the cereal aisle.
Why didn’t I give her any grace?

Why am I so weary all the time?
I doomscroll on my phone;
cracked tempered glass like
everything else I don’t take care of. 
Doomscroll, what a word. 
Cakes. Vacations. Drunk weddings.
A mother holding her child.

But the child wears black plastic 
for a diaper. 
I wonder why I am so weary, weary. 
The child is all bones and angles, and the face—
that same look the Somali children had in the ads 
on TV when I was small.

And there is nothing more in that moment
that I want than to trade places
or scream or sledgehammer a car or
anything, but not nothing. I want to hold this mother.

Her child will soon die. 

And who will comfort her in
Gaza, where
soft mattresses and full bellies write,
“But October 7th, what about that?” 
“She doesn’t look as starved as her kid?”
“Even so, come, Lord Jesus!”

Even so, 
mercy is a funny thing. 
We want it for ourselves but not others. 
I wish my chest didn’t feel like it can no longer
cage my heart. 
Growing, stretching, pulling until it bursts,
and I vanish into the rains that 
flow down the mountains.

But then I blink:
back in my living room.
My daughter dances,
her belly full. 
Her wobbly arabesque cuts
through the thickness in my throat.
I don’t deserve this.
Even so.
I tell her it’s time for bed.

A Note

I’ve been having a love/hate relationship with social media. Mostly hate.

Yet I still find myself checking each app; the colonization of algorithms digging deeper in my brain.

Yesterday, I saw the photo that I believe will be looked at 50 years from now, and people will ask, “Why didn’t anyone do anything?”

And while there are many out there on the front lines doing the right things and the hard things, just as many, if not more, of us are just too comfortable.

Myself included.

Unfortunately, I made the universal mistake of checking the comments on the photo.

The absolute least I can do as a human being right now is not leave comments whatabouting a woman whose child is near death. Or questioning her appearance. Or praying for the end of the world.

When I saw the photo, I immediately thought of La Pietà.

A lamentation of an innocent.
A mother mourning alone.

I don’t have any answers or advice other than to say this:

There is no justification for starving and bombing children.

For Further Reading

The Guardian
CNN
Unicef
International Rescue Committee
World Food Programme