Training
I laugh, looking back.
The years speed up—
Florida traffic when the snowbirds arrive.
Red lights feel optional—unless you remember you’re in one. I’ve seen enough to strip the naiveté from faith.
Crashes—car parts flung in a wide, bright ring of road. A debris field like the war my mother saw at five: waking to sirens, running in nightclothes, my grandmother scooping up five children and saying, now.
My shoulders are broad—
one of my better features—
as I round the corner of 69.
No one notices—until you’re treading water in the Gulf and need something to hold you up.
Yes, we were immigrants. I became a U.S. citizen in Honolulu forty years ago. We came by plane, sponsored by family; I was an infant in my mother’s arms while Germany still counted the cost of war.
I got a chance at a better life—better than my mama had. The man I married was a brute: brilliant, cruel. I loved him. I loathed him. He showed me the world and taught me to fight for my place in it. Years went by, soldiering on. Still, I learned: keep your head, keep moving, and don’t let the wreckage be the end of you.