mother poems

Basil Seeds | Adnan Shafi - Contemporary Poetry Website Featuring Notable Poems

Basil Seeds | Adnan Shafi

Basil seeds black in our kitchen,
Their close aura is the aura of mellowing,

And my mother, entering the room softly,
Takes a seat at the table, takes up the task

Of expunging the extra dust away,
Even half ripened ones are sundered gingerly.

She makes sure to prepare the seven glasses of water of basil seed
For this, I am grateful. I explain, this task

Would love to save everything like,

Regulating blood sugar, building strong bones, relieving stress, cooling the body, etc. She smiles at me

As the basil seeds at the touch of water begin to swell,

With a translucent white film coating each black seed,

They become twice their size.

What can I do? I ask finally. Nothing she says, let me finish my glass at the nigh time of Iftaar.

My Mother | Joan McNerney - Contemporary Poetry Website Featuring Notable Poems

My Mother | Joan McNerney

How she must have missed
those green hills of Ireland.
Walking along hard grey
streets in Brooklyn.

Remembering scent of
grassy meadows hurrying
along ten long blocks
to climb the filthy subway.

Her marriage failed, her health
gone. Nobody seemed to care.
Her smiling days were over.
The unlucky are often alone.

Missing those sweet soft pastures.
On her way home from work
buying day old bread and searching
for dented cans and items on sale.

How she must have longed
for songs around the fireplace.
Another beautiful Irish colleen
torn from that emerald island.

The Mother I'd Known | Shelly Blankman - Contemporary Poetry Website Featuring Notable Poems

The Mother I’d Known | Shelly Blankman

There is nothing left now but bits
and bones of the mother I’d known.
Her hair once shiny and nicely styled,
smelling lemony with each morning hug,

now dirty, mousy gray, scraggly.
Hanging down to her knees like
an old curtain. It drapes one eye.
She reminds me of Veronica Lake,

I tell her. She stares at me blankly, this
woman who once watched movies with me,
shared memories of stars “back in the
day” when movies were better, she’d say.

“You tried to braid my hair,” she accuses me,
this stranger’s eyes glaring “I didn’t, Mom.”
My voice quivers and I am trapped in thoughts
of a 10-year-old child caught in a lie she

never told. My heart soars back decades, when
she braided my hair so tightly, so perfectly painful.
I would close my eyes, try to soak back tears, hoping
the ordeal would soon end, but dared not complain.

Even then, I knew looking nice was as vital to her as
breathing. She expected the same of me. Still, it was
torture. Seams didn’t match. Pants were too baggy. Or
too tight. And what’s that fleck no one saw but her?

I miss those days now. Her distorted mirror shattered,
her critical eye blinded by Alzheimer’s. I long for
the days of painful braiding, lemony hugs and gushing
over old movie stars, favorite films. I’ll still see her on

holidays she no longer knows and bring her flowers
she demands I take when I leave. Then I’ll go home
and wait to hear when the vultures of Alzheimer’s
have spit out her last bits of bones, now turned to dust.

Wonder Lady | Ivan Jenson - Contemporary Poetry Website Featuring Notable Poems

Wonder Lady | Ivan Jenson

Everybody seems so young
ever since you became
every age you ever were
in my memory…
aging sons and elderly
mothers share coffee
at Starbucks
shooting the breeze
killing time…
I never knew what to say
to you
and I admit
I grew tired of the fact
that you were mostly made
of long winded
shallow-breathed stories
and lore
and little more
and how life to you
was once one big communist
party
back when you stood up
to the man
and felt lucky
that your oldest son
my brother
was 4-F
and never
had to serve in Vietnam
I’m not sure if I can do this
without your left wing bravado
but who knows…
maybe I can

More at https://www.ivanjenson.com/.

Tell-All | Ivan Jenson - Contemporary Poetry Website Featuring Notable Poems

Tell-All | Ivan Jenson

I confess that you
once made everything old
and beautiful
in an incensed church
or long nap on a rainy afternoon
sort of way
and the rusted brass rings
of this world
were no longer
worth reaching for
only the long stretching
past held interest
as you chained me to
the pillars of your yesteryear
and everything was about
ancient relics
tiny trinkets, rings, stones,
Bach Partitas or buckets
of wishes to live
elsewhere
no place in particular
just anywhere but in
the graveyard backyard
that living had become
for you…for us
and only Fred twirling Ginger
brought a sunken smile
to your once stunning
face that in it’s hey girl
hey day
made my father
give up his dream of writing
the great American novel
in exchange for marrying
his Latin American destiny
in all its tempestuous
disastrous glory

More at http://www.ivanjenson.com/.

Mom Incorporated | Ivan Jenson - Contemporary Poetry Website Featuring Notable Poems

Mom Incorporated | Ivan Jenson

Let’s arrange
just one more
meeting of our hearts
and our minds
you choose the time
and the place
and I will promise to
be there
with one of those
insufferably
trendy gratitude lists
some flowers for the dead
and the blood red wine of Jesus
for good measure…
you will be Lady Lazarus
and I will speak for
the bunch of us
you left like penniless
homeless orphans
singing songs from Annie
on the street corner
for the living
begging for just one more minute
with the mother of all inventions
who had, with your low-tech precision
manufactured a limited edition
assembly line of love
made by a Costa Rican
in the USA

More at http://www.ivanjenson.com/.

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