Understanding Your Old Man
Understanding Your Old Man — for Emerson, Eden, and Shiloh Things are held together, of course, but loosely as an infant’s head held. Sometimes, when the horizon is wet and heavy with towels and fat vowels of sweaters, the black comma of socks, a breeze unlocks the light fabric of the blue fishing shirt, which lifts open like a gate that I duck through into the world so poorly hidden right there on the other end of laundry. And sometimes, dragging across the evening over the trampoline a stitch of geese so long a pine could snag it like a suture, and if it did the tender, orange flesh of Tuesday would surely tear, dumping its intestines on our heads till we were good and sloppy with God. At the old place we peeled up the laminate and found hardwood. Since then I give it my all to hang on to hangnails and shuffle slow, dragging my fingers through the dirt...