When reviewing our excesses,
Is to scan our early childhood
For the source of our distresses—
Regarding sex or money,
Why that which makes me feel morose
Is that which you find funny.
Unveiled when we take stock,
Which is why my wife would ask my
Earliest memory of Bach.
When first I was afflicted:
For as in many families ‘twas
My mom got me addicted,
With her bow and D-string,
Denying the long-term effects
It might have on her offspring.
At the tender age of six,
Finding me at 65
Still desperate for each fix.
May well be implicated—
Despite impracticalities,
Outright facilitated
The world became my cactus;
I had the notion everyone
Would love to hear me practice.
performative, some say,
With self-involvement lingering
On this page for display.
Ill-suited to the stage;
Modeling compassion
And principled outrage,
The leveraging of privilege,
Holding space for others’ pain—A quest which sent me back to school—
Calisthenics for the brain.
Just so we could talk shop,
The end-effect was humbling,
Baring pretense I could drop;
To living in the world,
With movements yet imperfect,
My sails hastily furled.
To where I may retreat
From the emotional chaos
Of those who feel defeat.
For all they failed to get
The less I take for granted
What’s so easy to forget:
Through things both large and small,
Discerning how to offer help
When first-born hit a wall.
However much we know,
Is to keep alive the memory
Of what it is to grow.
Right up through today,
Digging in her garden,
Painting like Monet.
While chronicling the past,
She celebrates the present,
A first who shall be last.
To hold our elders dear;
For she is the one who leads us
To face changes without fear.