Christmas Dinner
There is lots of movement and cigarette smoking
at regular intervals when the adults all convene and decide to
"step outside" and the screen door slams shutting out the winter
while a multicolored christmas tree sits and stares silently at me
and I wonder what nicotine is like.
And the smell of smoke on a denim jacket hung on the back of a chair
still reminds me of my dad as if it were him walking through the
front doors of the hardware store I'm working at, and not some
random stranger.
And they're laughing in the kitchen about something I wish I understood
as I watch his face light up and control the narrative,
his brother and sisters all competing to make him laugh,
his mother in the living room with me just sitting
and we all said thank you for the meal.
Coffee is eventually made which triggers yet another sojourn to the driveway
I couldn't even stand the smell of it then,
and I follow them outside, not particularly unwelcomed, just to stand in the cold and
listen to them talking
about work, and kids, and making jokes
with not an ounce of tension anywhere
and I see snow blowing through under the yellow glow of a street light
and it was just as cold then as it is in my heart tonight
I hear a dull bell ring out behind my eyes
which makes a lingering, painfully nostalgic drone
that does not fade but gets louder, and it makes everything gray
and lifeless before me
except for that moment walking back into the house and it's so warm
and a Christmas Story is on the TV again for the 5th time today
as one of them offers me a plate full of cookies
with a look which holds me with a casual and undying affection
that had been the tether keeping me held to the ground
for many years until I purposefully cut it
and even though it is always still there,
there is a part of me that is constantly looking for something else to ground me
as if that wasn't enough.