Waldo Canyon Fire coming into Mountain Shadows
For the Waldo Canyon Fire, Colorado College will host an exhibit of work (poems, photos) commemorating those who endured and volunteered for the fire effort. Here is my (reworked) submission for the exhibit:
The Firefighter’s Wife
I am a car crashResounding
Cranked metal twistingFreshly destroyed
I am not rusted The fury of my hands colliding
Praying
Asking why asking how asking for anything at all because an answer would be better than this
AloneAnd yet not It’s not about me
Distorted in shock
In guilt
And yet it must be hidden: shame of undiluted fear for others It was never about me
It’s about children needing me to hold it together
It’s my love on a fiery mountainside as the flame front spreads out tentacles lashingTorching
Unblinking they fightTerror packed in back bunker pockets
SecretiveIt’s not there Yet how can I tell them he’s safeWhen he’s subduing and running and choking on smokeSoakedNo room for bruises when reassurance is the most important thingSo I lieTo everyone Blackened
Skeleton trees
Ash strewn in the air catching tongues
Catching catching gleaning peaking short The rocks
Scorched but incapable of conducting
A wasted effort
Directed redirected reaching arching
Something more These are the foothills of my young lifeThese are JennerBroganAshtonStill The trauma has passed in the wind wisps faded
Embers blown
Eyes streaming and for what
Nightmares shall pass
Hunger shall return
And this is only part of a sea of restless Colorado summers where yellowed ashCollects on windshields overnight For certainly we are lucky happy family
Unburned
Unbroken
It is through
Through to color memories of insufficiencies and bittersweet consolation prizes
Certain and savor the notion that we are lucky happy
UnwreckedUnrustedCrashing
No longer - Carrie Nyman