By John Grey
You’re the only boy,
the youngest of five.
One mother plus four surrogates –
you grew up being not only loved
but praised for just being you.
Whatever are the opposite of scars,
that’s what you bear,
from being gently handled,
never admonished,
forgiven in advance
for any malfeasance.
So here you are, at twenty-one.
with a history of bad grades behind you.
And too lazy to get off the couch
to go look for a job.
Your sisters have left home.
Your father also.
Now there’s just the two of you.
Your mother works hard
scrubbing floors at the hospital
just to support herself and her little
man.
And she works hard in the home
to make it neat and clean.
She works even harder
to keep on idolizing you.
And harder still to be convinced
that her hard work is working.
About the Author:
John Grey is an
Australian poet, US resident, recently published in New World Writing,
California Quarterly and Lost Pilots. Latest books, “Between Two Fires”,
“Covert” and “Memory Outside the Head” are available through Amazon. Work upcoming
in the Seventh Quarry, La Presa and Doubly Mad.
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