Family Tree
This time of year I envy the treeless families
Their empty yards, dying and dead grass
Waiting for the winter coming on and
Spring not far behind
But us tree families spend our time trying
To clean up after our family tree
Our ancestry, its ancestry on display
So there we are, rake in hand
Piling up the debris left behind by just being
Being there
My family tree with its high branches
We like to look up to, and
Some low branches, so low I need to
Bend almost in half to get by
And then there’s that part we’ve cut away
Over the years, a regular bald spot looming
Larger and larger
Something I’ve inherited, like trembling hands
And these malformed feet
This time of year, walking backward raking up
Conjuring up connections to this
Mysterious ancestry, piles of leaves
So much to clean up
That
I envy treeless families.
Leafmeal Lie
At 10:06 this morning a leaf fell from the maple
Out front. Saw it from the couch, looking out
The storm door. It fell, it floated down ending
Its season, its cycle on the ground under its tree.
It must have started like the others, a bud-like
Growth, the kind squirrels will eat in the Spring,
But it survived, grew, felt all the Summer heat
And the drought, the wind, the heavy downpours
And then this Fall weather, the chill, the falling
Away of its many companions. Then at 10:06
This morning it ended its cycle, its seasons, it fell
Floated to the ground to await its fate. Perhaps
It will be the mower turning it to mulch with
The rest, or maybe it will blow up the street, mix
With other leaves, get raked, get bagged, get
Carried off and composted miles from here, miles
Away from its tree. Or it could just blend in, lie
Flat, avoid all of my attempts to get rid of it, and
Then lie flat as it gets colder, begins to snow, and
Spends the Winter wet, frozen under the snow
Till Spring returns – and I’ll be sitting here on this
Couch looking out the screen door, waiting for
Something else as momentous to happen.
Cramped
No need for an alarm anymore
Or any of the other sounds that
Used to wake me: the sound of
My sons getting ready for school
Or my wife crashing away, trying
To fix our world before heading
Off to fix the world of her work.
No I don’t need any of those any-
More, this morning I woke up to
Leg cramps. My left shin, or was
It my right cramped into a pain
Strong enough to wake me, get
Me up hobbling around the room
Hoping to end it, to satisfy what-
Ever imbalance that set it off. It
Worked, I was up and the cramp
Toned down enough to walk on.
It was morning and I was up for
The day, without an alarm or any
Of the other distractions that played
That role. Online they say that my
Cramps are common for aging adults
And athletes. Never was an athlete
So I fall into that fifty percent of sixty
Plus year-olds who suffer these cramps.
It’s good to know I fit into the statistics
With about half of my group. I’d like to
Picture a chart somewhere, some med
School showing the percent and perhaps
A diagram of an aging cramped shin
Waking an aging adult instead of his clock.