Jeopardy
Sometimes when I phoned
my mother back in Tulsa, she would
say, "Hold on a minute, Ron, let me
turn this thing down," the thing
her TV, and she would look
around for the remote and then fumble
with its little buttons as an irritation
mounted in me and an impatience
and I felt like blurting out "You watch TV
too much and it's too loud and why
don't you go outside" because I was
unable to face my dread of her aging
and my heart made cold toward her
by loving her though not wanting to give up
my life and live near her so she
could see me every day and not
just hear me, which is why she
turned the TV down and said,
"Okay, that's better," then sometimes
launched into a detailed account
of whatever awful show she was watching.
Poem: "Jeopardy" by Ron Padgett, from How to Be Perfect © Coffee House Press, 2007.
Thursday, December 27, 2007
The Writer's Almanac has a way with poetry
Posted by Judith Shapiro at 8:36 PM
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you!
Post a Comment