The Year We All Got Cancer
The Year We All Got Cancer
Winter stayed.
The April rain so cold
it left blisters of ice
on an earth
as scarred and pockmarked
as a landscape mired in war.
We waited through the freeze and thaw
for some sign from the recalcitrant earth--
anxiety growing with each passing day.
The sun was of little use,
peeking indifferently
through the skeletal clouds,
as if late for an appointment
on another planet.
We had become
a shivering muddle--
a people resigned to winter,
when we woke one day
to wild things bursting.
Fields of dandelion
and mustard greens and,
in the most desolate spot of all,
a stand of wild asparagus.
first published in Word Fountain