Reason enough to love you.

Crying_by_zero_rider Reason Enough to Love You

The night my mama called–a Thursday night–
which meant, certainly, something was wrong,
you took my hand, sitting there on the bed
not interrupting while she told jokes and
I laughed   and I told jokes   and she laughed,
both of us trying to cry so soft, maybe
the other one could pretend not to hear.
You took my hand and held on tight while
my tears ran down your shoulder and mama
told another joke in my left ear.
You didn't make me explain, just held me
and took away some of the fear of dying.
The day they were shouting my name,
everyone looking at me like I was crazy
or had forgotten somehow to dress right
like all those nightmares from my childhood
you put your hand on my neck and squeezed
stayed close to me   stayed close
and put your fear in another place.
And that morning when I woke up crying
not able to say why, it could have been anything,
any of ten good reasons to just lay back and cry,
you slid over and put your whole body over mine
gently, your hand in my hair, your mouth on my ear,
wrapping silence and love and the muscles of your
thighs
all around me   and let me cry   let me cry
like no one ever let me before.
Dorothy Allison

My thanks to Allyson McDuffie for sending me this poem.

And so the Poemapalooza continues.

About Patti Digh

Patti Digh is an author, speaker, and educator who builds learning communities and gets to the heart of difficult topics. Her work over the last three decades has focused on diversity, inclusion, social justice, and living and working mindfully. She has developed diversity strategies and educational programming for major nonprofit and corporate organizations and has been a featured speaker at many national and international conferences.

5 comments to " Reason enough to love you. "
  • This is a stunning poem. The best line, for me, was ‘stayed close
    and put your fear in another place’

    That is real love.

    Thank you, Patti, for this lovely thing to wake to.

  • Acausal Connection

    A great poem from a controversial southern writer who was a victim of childhood abuse who seems to have triumphed over her troubled past.

    It is the most wonderful feeling in the world when someone recognizes, understands and responds to your emotional needs. It is, perhaps, the firmest foundation of love.

    On her website, I love a portion of the Emily Dickinson poem “Life” she quotes from:

    Hope is the thing with feathers
    That perches in the soul
    And sings the tune without the words
    And never stops at all…

    Wouldn’t it be wonderful if we all sprouted wings of eternal hope?

  • I have goosebumps. that was so telling and so hopeful a poem. Thank you for sharing!

  • That’s a beautiful poem — I am going to have to send it around. I had forgotten about it and Dorothy is one of my favorite authors.

  • Dorothy Allison is a great writer, and she makes me proud that I love the North Carolina writers like I do.

    She’s able to be in my face, my heart, and my head at the same time, and I am not the same.

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