They come from the sand, ready
in tank suits and floral caps
with territorial air and scorn
for those who waste time lying in the sun.
They are like sea turtles, from their sense of purpose,
to the color of their skin to their wrinkled everything.
They trudge on shore but then swim forth
in straight lines cut with punctual strokes and eyes
fixed on a horizon beyond the horizon, closing
for the nares to take in the waft of brine.
They keep swimming back and forth and never talk
counting silently, in a self-devised mantra mode.
And the October sea stays calm, nurturing
and warm – because it knows.
They are like sea turtles
only that their heads always stay above,
as their statement of dignity and manifesto,
and they always return to the shore.
"Late Swimmers" belongs to the chapbook In Womanly Fashion.
"I have fulfilled my duty"
she said, and crossed
her hands to assert
her place among
the saints.
That’s what life was
to her: A service full
of humdrum tasks
she had to accomplish.
No wonder her children felt
like cheap porcelain dishes
left on the rack to dry.
"The Final Statement" belongs to the collection Checking the Exits, a chapbook that examines the themes of death, old age and terminal disease.