When I was young and I heard noises in the night, I was not afraid;
I knew it was just my sister, sneaking out the window,
scraping her thighs on the torn aluminum screen
and passing through spider webs on her way out.
Shock-thud in the heel where the bone spur would later develop.
How well-adjusted her eyes must be to the dark.
Not like mine, hopelessly blind under anything but a clear day-lit sky.
Every morning, first thing, I open the blinds for the plants.
I start with the west window, where the tradescantia creep.
Then the ones to the north, to let a little light in
for the silver satin splash and the lanky Zanzibar gem.
Whoever named the plants were poets.
When a hummingbird purrs and taps its beak on the glass,
I am not afraid. All that I love is alive today.
โEyes are the windows to the soul,โ the neighbor said.
Ruthieโs mom, I think. Her one disciplinary hand full of cigarette.
My sister snickered, bloodshot,
skunk smell sunk into her skin and every strand of eyebrow hair.
I wrapped her secrets in a porcelain hug around my shoulders,
and I was not afraid.
Today, the world outside the window is blue as a jewel.
A text from my sisterโs oldest son: his favorite poem so far
is "Dust of Snow" by Robert Frost.
The way a crow / shook down on me / the dust of snow / from a hemlock tree.
I hear the rattling, the key searching for the keyhole,
a winking shadow in the porch light,
and I am not afraid. Wide open, my heart, a door.
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