Poetry |

“I Want to Be an Adirondack Chair”

I Want to Be an Adirondack Chair

 

 

dusted with browning plum and cherry blossoms.

I want to be outside on all days, in all weather,

to never have to go inside, choose a cookbook,

 

a recipe, plug in the rice cooker, peel the yams, sharpen

the knife. I want to be in earshot of the juncos

and chickadees, of the Steller’s jay

 

with its punk-rocker crest, as if it had been dipped

in Extreme Blue. I want to have a front row seat

when the neighbor’s paper gets delivered

 

at four am. I could say I want to be the mauve-leaved maple,

or the streetlight, or the dead-end sign, but really

what I want is to be a thing people sit on,

 

take a load off, a place where there’s just enough sun. Where,

perhaps, the mail carrier will stroll by, hand a someone

coupons and circulars, but not divorce papers,

 

shut-off notices, a summons for jury duty. If I could be

an Adirondack chair, I’d stop complaining

about the crumbs on the counter,

 

the floor, the stairs. I’d be out here, beside the blooming lavender,

so the dried mud on the hardwood floors wouldn’t matter;

I’d be overhearing my neighbors

 

loading their bicycles onto their car, debating whether to take I-5

or Highway 99, one reminding the other to clamp down

the tires, cuz you know what happened

 

last time. If I were wooden, if I were painted red, I swear I’d stop

wishing I was paddling when I’m running, running

when I’m paddling. I’d just be happy

 

where I am, out in the front yard, admiring my favorite feline

as she reduces a German Shephard

to a whimpering mess.

Contributor
Martha Silano

Martha Silano is the author of five books of poetry, including Gravity Assist, Reckless Lovely, and The Little Office of the Immaculate Conception, all from Saturnalia Books. She also co-authored, with Kelli Russell Agodon, The Daily Poet: Day-By-Day Prompts for your Writing Practice (Two Sylvias Press, 2013). She teaches at Bellevue College near her home in Seattle, WA.

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