Here’s
a photo of myself and niece Emma earlier this week at the Snow exhibit at the Museum of Civilization. As part of her March Break, she spent a couple of days
with us, and the four of us spent a day wandering museums and other exciting
adventures. As our portrait demonstrates so well, apparently Victorian photographers couldn’t use camera equipment in the north, so re-created outdoor snow shots in photo studios instead—here we are looking rough, Victorian and so
terribly serious.
Over
the years, I seem to have turned these birthday posts into a kind of annual
tally (last year, the year before, the year before, etc), checking in as to where I was at that given point, and what was going on
(much the way, I suppose, I did recently in the blog tour interview and my short essay on the fragment). Last year, for example, I was swimming in the
knowledge that I’d received my birth mother’s name, but couldn’t tell you that
we already knew we were pregnant (for about a week—Christine informed me first
thing, while I was still asleep, on the morning of March 8th). And
now we have our Emperor Rose, who is entirely lovely, hilarious and so very entertaining,
but slows everything else down considerably (as we fully knew she would). We live
in a house on Alta Vista, where we all exist all day every day (but for travel
for readings and other what-nots) as we all enjoy the benefits of time and
space of Christine’s maternity leave (which ends in November). By this time
next year, I’ll be home full-time solo with toddler. How did I get here?
Things
are quieter, slower. Days revolve around baby, as does any attempt at work (I sit at desk with sleeping baby, I sit at desk while Christine feeds her,
downstairs). Everything revolves around slowness, and how little we might leave
the house.
We
have a good lead, also, on where the birth mother might be. Could that
registered letter I’ve been contemplating be far behind?
And
the annual birthday poem. Obviously.
Birthday:
forty-four,
Disturbed.
My body follows
me
around.
Rosmarie
Waldrop, Love, Like Pronouns
Endless, numbered. An accidental thought. Geometry
of calendars, reflect. We interrupt. Collapse punctuation, sulphur,
deoxygenated blood. Intention. Were we not traffic, clipped. Misplaced,
adjacent. As prepositions. Endless, snow. The very thing. I refuse. I take my
distance. Forty-four years, equally distributed. Uncertainty of facts, persist.
These grainy pronouns. Mother, may I. Tilt, a noise, distracts. Narratives, out
of details. Question: falsehoods. To be born. Who are you, comma. Consequences,
approach. Make a point of. I have less to say.
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