If I am mostly made up of
water, then let it be the water of Amelia Island and a steamy hot bath. Let me
be gallons of chlorinated water from Mt. Lebanon High School Pool and rainbows
of water streaming from the good fountain on the second floor of Fernway
School. Let it be cold water from a
yellow Igloo jug during the fifth inning of a tied softball game. Something rippling from the Chagrin
River. The coffee that has sat between
me and my friends at the Stone Oven. Or
the metallic tasting water from the tennis center, especially after that match
I played with Erin Pesko when I was sixteen.
If I am made up of connective
tissue, then let it be the bungy cord from the luggage rack of the green wood
paneled 1975 Ford station wagon. Let it
be the rope and the tape that Tavish wraps around every nook and cranny of his
house as he concocted paths to secret treasures. Let me be made up of the vines that wend
their way around the new oaks at River’s Edge.
If I am made of apatite and bones,
then let it be straight from the marrow of my ruptured humerus. Let me be reminded forever and again of the
growth inherent in hurt and healing. it be the hollow bone of the heron that
swooped down on Nikki and me on the banks of the Cuyahoga River. Let me be made of the steel rafters of Three
Rivers Stadium and a dropped anchor of Chub Cay in the Bahamas.
If I am made of carbohydrates and
sugar, then load me up with candy from Kovall’s. Graeter’s ice cream circa 1983. And my mother’s sour cream coffee cake served
warm from the oven the morning of her annual Christmas brunch.
If I am made of DNA, then let it arch
all the way back to the Isle of Silt, the hefty German Reinholds. And give me a
strong dose of the ministering Cowans.
I’ll take my dad’s square fingernails and his love of music. I will give thanks for my mother’s foresty
hairline and her artistic taste. I will carry the eggs still in me and release
all of the eggs come and gone. But,
honestly, I grieve them, the children I will never mother.
If I am made up of free radicals,
then let it be so. Let me be more free
and more radical.
If I am made of gases, please let
it be the air of Abiuqui or the woods behind Dennison Hall at Miami
University. I also will take liters and
liters from the swirling drives in the Rabbit Convertible, especially the air east, far out Shaker Blvd. And the air in the words spoken and heard
from the pulpit at Forest Hill Church.
If I am made up of small particles
of other things too, like cofactors and ions, let them be made of beach glass,
especially red and bright aqua blue. And
the pea gravel from Middle Path at Kenyon College. Let them be the first peak at the baby toes
of my nieces and nephew. Let there be
stubby chewed pencils, especially those used during Monday poetry play times,
and wadded up bubble gum wrappers left on my front porch.