That smelled like rust and decade-old sweat
So he had duct-tape ready for my cleats
Coming apart minutes before the match,
Splitting right under my shin-guards and size-4 feet
Sat me on the curb and took a knee,
Grabbed my foot like I was Cinderella on spikes,
Tied me in electrical tape until my foot was numb.
Thumped my little leg to say "Let's go,"
And the spikes split through the adhesive as I stood up.
I was his makeshift princess
Ready to play, ready to knock some teeth out
Hadn't learned about shame yet,
Or that other kids had new things
But nothing feels sturdier than quick and dirty
Faith you can't buy
Some things never change; busted shoes,
The feeling that anything's good enough.
His old toolbox sits in the back of my car,
Nothing's never been proper about me
Mystery bruises, filthy shoes, gappy teeth
Riding till the wheels fall off
Nice details! I can really picture it.
ReplyDeleteOh how I love this poem!!
ReplyDeleteOh my gosh. You have a real hero... in your dad and now you are the hero. Don't let anyone tell you otherwise. A real beautiful memory you're holding on to. Wonderful. a well deserved honor. Congratulations. Keep writing more like this one.
ReplyDeleteI missed this yesterday, damn glad I didn't today. Stand proud.
ReplyDeleteI missed your poem yesterday. Glad I read it today - it gives me a glimpse into another life.
ReplyDeleteThis lands and takes hold. Congratulations:)
ReplyDeleteI love the fact your father never says a word but also so says so much at the same time.
ReplyDelete