Authors: Jane Shore
born the year the
Titanic
sank.
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But before she'll let me kidnap her,
she hijacks me, steering her spiffy
high-tech walker across the street
into rush-hour traffic to the bank.
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Breathless, I plead for her to stop.
Bypassing the flashing ATM,
waving her cane, she makes a scene,
repeating yesterday's, before I came,
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when she demanded that the teller
withdraw $5,000 in fives and tens,
and make it snappy,
from her account.
The bank called the cops, the cops
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called her doctor, her doctor
called me to please come ASAP,
extract her from her apartment house
and move her into assisted living.
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She calls her walker her “wagon.”
She calls me by my mother's name.
Now that both my parents are gone,
I am the responsible party.
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I'm responsible and it's no party.
After accusing her optometrist
of losing her bifocals, my aunt
pocketed his ballpoint pen,
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the same pen she uses to sign for
the five grand in soft bundled bills
we stuff into tote bags like robbers.
She's the brains. I'm her accomplice.
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They can't arrest us. There's no law
against withdrawing money that is
rightfully yours. Back from the bank,
she's too busy dumping her loot
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into a drawer to catch me slipping
her car keys into my purse.
She insists on cooking us dinner.
My mouth waters for her brisket,
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the only dish she's famous for.
Instead, she fills a pot with milk,
stirs in a spoon of instant oatmeal,
turns on the gas, opens the fridge,
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and stares inside as if she's opened a book
and lost her place. Is she hungry?
Where's her appetite? Come to think of it,
where's her full-length sable coat?
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Not in the closet where I saw it last.
Did she throw it down the incinerator
chute along with the garbage bags
she ghost-walks past the corridor's
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numbered doors twenty times a day?
Is that fur warming a neighbor's back?
Lost, her husband's star-sapphire ring,
her strand of graduated cultured pearls,
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her Chanel handbag, not a knockoff.
Lost, her lovely, sophisticated things.
Where did they go? Misplaced? Stolen?
She won't let strangers inside her door,
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no social worker, not even the super.
She points to snapshots of my daughter
among the rogue's gallery on her desk:
“She's very pretty, what's her name?”
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She says it again two minutes later.
And says it again five times more.
Though I'm afraid to leave her alone,
I lock the bathroom against her.
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I don't want Auntie to see me cry.
I sit down on the closed toilet lid,
turn on the faucet, flush the toilet,
in case she's listening at the door.
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But she isn't. She's where I left her,
humming happily, perfectly in tune,
“Unforgettable.”
Dream CityUnforgettable, that's what you are.
One night, Chen Chu dreamt that he was a butterfly. In his dream, he had never been anything but a butterfly. When he woke up he didn't know if he was Chen Chu dreaming that he was a butterfly or a butterfly dreaming that he was Chen Chu.
âZen koan
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I was sleeping in a round room made of stone.
A voice called out, “This is your room. This is your bed.”
For months thereafter, I crossed a river
on thoroughfares to a city that seemed familiar.
Most nights I'd return there.
Its turn-of-the-century architecture,
wrought-iron and stone apartment houses,
looked like the buildings on Park Avenue, and Fifth.
Sometimes I dreamed hybrids of buildings
over and over: a libraryâhotel, a train stationâschool;
and a department store with a rickety elevator that took me
to the fourth floor, where the dresses were.
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In one dream, I caught myself telling someone,
“These are the clothes I wear in my dreams,”
as I opened a closet. Inside were
shoes, jumpers, coats, a green hat with a featherâ
my taste, my size, they even
smelled
like me.
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And, once, I brought someone along with me from
here
.
Here, where I am when I'm wide awake.
I said, “This is the place I always dream about.”
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As I fall asleep, my dream picks up in the place
where it left off the night beforeâ
the street, the house, the room.
The next day, I might catch a glimpse of it
superimposed on what I'm
really
seeingâ
a shard of light bleeding onto a negative.
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In time, I began to see my city,
the basso continuo playing behind the melody
of my everyday life, as a kind of everyday life, too:
its industry, the bustle of its people,
its traffic, its history, its parallel
ongoingness
â
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But not long ago, I was traveling
along the Jersey side of the Hudson
where I grew up. I hadn't been back in years:
the woods were goneâ
the collapsing docks and broken pilings
replaced with high-rent condos, supermarkets, malls,
anthills in the shadow of the Palisades.
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The bridge and tunnel traffic was awful.
Instead of taking a bus, I crossed
to Manhattan by commuter ferry.
In the middle of the river, I looked up
at the skyline, the buildings
bronzed by late-afternoon lightâ
my dream city's lightâ
the city I'd dreamed since I was twelveâ
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but I wasn't dreaming.
My husband and daughter were sitting on the bench
on either side of me.
Rows of strangers, too.
Some gazed at the skyline, as I did.
Body and SoulOthers read their newspapers, or dozed.
The soul remains attached to the physical body after death for the first seven days, when it flits from its home to the cemetery and back. This explains why the initial mourning period is one week. For twelve months after death the soul ascends and descends, until the body disintegrates and the soul is freed.
âDictionary of Jewish Lore and Legend
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Which must be the reason why,
lying awake in my mother's bed
the night after her funeral, I caught her
rummaging in the underwear drawer.
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What a relief to know
the dead are
expected
to come backâ
so seeing them up and about so soon
is no big deal.
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If you die, say, in July,
I'd like to think that in the next few weeks,
your soul clings like the bar code
to the book of your body.
Little by little, the label
starts to peel, curling and lifting
until the sticky underside loses its grip.
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By Labor Day, your body
can walk your soul on a leash,
yanking it back when it lifts a hind leg
over the perfect green of a neighbor's lawn.
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Around Halloween, the soul begins to rise.
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Thanksgiving,
it's a kind of beach ball clearing the net.
On New Year's Day, it flips on the trampoline
of the body, bouncing higher and higher
until it shoots through the roof.
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As Pesach approaches,
the soulâtied by the anklesâ
bungee-jumps from the body,
which, meanwhile, has been attending to
its own messy business in the ground.
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How else to explain why
Judah ha-Nasi would suddenly appear
to his family on Friday nights,
dressed in his Shabbat finery,
recite Kiddush over the wine, and vanish.
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Or why my mother, just last week,
stood behind me by the stove,
telling me my kugel needs more salt.
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A retired dentist from Great Neck
swears he's photographed a soul leaving its body.
And a deposed countess from Romania
topped
that,
claiming she's measured its weight in ounces.
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On my mother's Yahrzeit,
when our family gathers at the cemetery
to unveil her headstone,
and we're crying, why be sad?
Think of it as a bon voyage partyâ
a soul at last at liberty
God's Breathto make its own plans.
If God can be said to breathe the soul
into each living thing, as he did into Adam,
then the magician we hired
for our daughter's birthday party was like God.
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Before performing the rabbit-in-the-hat trick,
before pulling shiny nickels
from Emma's ears,
he got a long skinny green balloon
and stretched it like saltwater taffy,
then put his lips to its lip and blew.