Blue Shades of My Heart
The twelve-year-old girl
cracks open her bedroom door,
tiptoeing around her sleeping parents
and little sister,
in search of a God.
Maybe they wake up
understanding why she needs
to believe another dimension exists.
Where does happiness live?
I’m standing in auntie’s kitchen,
while the girl in the blue ruffled top
dips candy canes into hot cocoa.
Auntie’s friend tells her,
“Blue is your color.”
In that moment, the one-sided mirror
between her and the world shatters,
and she’s no longer invisible.
She beams, choosing a color,
her special gift.
Polyester becomes her second skin,
a synergy, transforming
her confidence.
I watch her spread her wings,
wearing her blue ruffles.
She’s facing her classmates,
reciting her story of faith
and imagination.
A dark chocolate cross,
with a cherry stone center,
holding the power to heal
the world.
I step further into her memories,
revisiting summers spent
at Brakehart lake.
She’s darting into the glistening waters,
oblivious to sandstones grazing
her bare feet.
In the ocean’s reflection,
Nana’s nose crinkles when I kiss
her soft cheek.
Ma’s teasing me, calling me
an little old lady (I prefer old soul.)
for enjoying lemon cake
and hot black tea
and green pistachio ice cream.
My Dad is alive, joking about filling
our jelly shoes with peanut butter,
and I hear my sister’s shrieking laughter,
amidst smoky air
and burnt hotdogs
of our family barbecue.
I choke on bittersweet tears
and dive in after her.
I love myself most
when submerged in an ocean
of affection, cradling every heart
I treasure.
My heart swells, remembering her
dancing and belly laughing
with my sister and cousin,
the photograph I hold close.
What I’ve longed for is here—
happiness lives within
the twelve-year-old.
Within me, in the sunny skies
of my childhood memories.
I vow to no longer search
outside of her.
I rub my raw hands, after twenty years
tearing myself down,
searching for something worth saving.
For the first time, I discovered myself.
I cradled my heart,
a heart I hadn’t held
in forty two years.