Like An Almost Vow
I am 7 years old at Bubby's house in the den.
Granddad is teasing, joking -- he's full of
tricks.
"Say what I say," he tells me.
"Just say it fastfastfast."
I nod. Bite
my lip, ready for whatever question will come.
He asks: "I love me who do you love?"
"Me!" I answer, quickly, jumping to my
tippy toes to answer fastfastfast.
His face falls.
"What about me?" he asks. "Don't you love me?"
Shame floods my body as he tells
Bubby, my mother, my aunts and uncles and cousins
that I love myself more than I love him.
"You've got a big head," he tells me,
and that
becomes my nickname.
Big Head.
Today
as I sit next to
Bubby's reclining chair in her house in the den,
I hold her hand and
remind her who I am.
She asks,
"Why do you have
all those rings on your fingers?"
"I don't know,
Bubby," I say.
"I like them.
This one," I say, pointing
to the silver rose I always wear,
"I like because you
gave it to me."
She nods.
"I don't know why
you wear those things.
You look like you're
married to yourself."
I laugh.
"Do you love
yourself?" she asks.
My breath almost
catches on my answer
but I hear myself say
"I do,"
like a New Year promise
or an almost vow.
She nods
and silence falls
between us in
that forgiving place
somewhere between
unspoken
and forgotten.
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