A Force of Nature
By Paul Tran
Mixed greens. Purple onions. Banana
Peppers. Tomatoes. Avocados. Mayonnaise. Pepper. Sourdough.
A stranger knows
Your mother’s order, has seen her
From the other side of the glass where she is always
Right and a number one
Priority. Someone asked
How she was doing, how they could help her.
Chained in whose dungeon
Were you—whose good boy were you
Pretending to be—when she said please and may and I and have
For the first time? A stranger heard
The anticipating delight
In her voice you have nearly forgotten. Do you feel that
Knife in your back
Twisting, digging in? You betrayed yourself
For nothing. In exchange for her heels shuffling, scuffing
The linoleum, rising slowly
On her tiptoes like a newborn gull, divinely astonished
By the brine, that ax of air
Hacking, swinging in from the sea
As she leans in tempted, a tempest.
You got to live a life of the mind. Are you happy with yourself?
You gave up her hands, radiant
Bells in the highest tower of her monastery, trembling
As she reaches to receive this moment
Made just for her
Because she asked, because she had
Paid the price: unzipping her coin purse for exactly
Seventy-five cents, counting—
Thirty two sense fifty fifty five send sexy five saints
Okay seven seventy won seventy true seventy tree seventy poor
Seventy five sands tank you—
Placing everything she had left to her name
In a stranger’s hands.
You thought your hunger mattered
More than hers, you were more important to history
Than your mother? The fuck?
She knows you hated her
Spaghetti—pack of noodles
Boiled, drained, dressed in ketchup
Hoarded from Burger King. Like a crown, you wear a stapled scar
From the previous millennium, playing hide and seek
In a hamper, finding yourself
And freeing yourself—
Tumbling over—
Shattering all over the kitchen that took her entire Sunday to clean—
Blood everywhere, you blamed her for not being there
The first time and the second.
Your mother has not once not been the only one
Rubbing eucalyptus oil into your back
With a nickel. Her eyes holding back
The signs she saw, like useless currency, oceans eternally separate.
A mother. A daughter. You and her
Both bowed before the bodhisattva
Every night of your childhood
To ask no more please don’t make me don’t bring me back
Here. Bound by debt, near death
As two bats in the branches of a beech in July, finding a way
Back to the cave, you and she are alike
In manner, mannerism, taste for a man
Who regards you less than muck
Stuck to his boot, kicking and kicking you. She knows
You insist she doesn’t know that you used her
Charcoal and Twisted Rose, smudging and scrubbing your face
As her car pulled in. Fuchsia
In Paris. She knew he hurt you. Irreverence. Because
She couldn’t do a thing,
She set you free. You’re the sparrow
Her eye is on. You tell her you love her. She lets you lie
Every single time. You only love you
The way she loved
Only herself, until she loved you.
In her car—key, ignition, engine murmuring low—
She chuckles, blushes
With complete incredulity, embarrassed
By her own incredible laughter.
She couldn’t believe herself. She amazed herself. Who else will?
Source: Poetry (May 2025)