Small Town, Illinois, 1960s

Mom, at Home

To caption her black-and-white flippant pose—
her smile real, her hair teenage dark—the musty
yearbook quips, “Good things: small packages.”

At five-two but buoyant on tennis calves,
she claimed she flunked college chemistry
from too much fun in pre-war Chicago,
finally free and far enough from home.

In high school (“back in the Depression…”)
she and the girls and current boyfriends
would escape to secluded cul-de-sacs
in abandoned developments, fix headlights

on the discs of smooth pavement and dance till
Cleveland’s midnight to the Dorseys, Goodman,
Miller, and Harry James on the radio,
Artie Shaw her favorite — A Strange

Loneliness. Moonglow. “You kids don’t know
how to dance,” she’d tell my 60s sisters,
eyes sparkling, mouth slightly parted, her teeth
still white as a commercial girl’s. Until

somebody’s wedding, I only saw Mom
dance big-band behind an ironing board
to the tunes on TV shows, the long arms

of my father’s white shirts, damp, unrolled
from the basket, opened wide and empty,
flattened, then pressed, first one, then the other.

Stereo Story #778


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D. R. James, retired from nearly 40 years of teaching college writing, literature, and peace studies, lives and cycles with his psychotherapist wife in the woods near Saugatuck, Michigan. His latest of ten collections is Mobius Trip (Dos Madres 2021), and work appears internationally in many anthologies and journals. https://www.amazon.com/author/drjamesauthorpage