We're fast approaching Christmas,
and the choir has practiced the song
for maybe three weeks now. "Listen
to the recording at home,"
the director reminds us. Warm tea
soothes my throat while I knit.
The red sweater was done by Halloween,
knit
with click-clicks and slow breath, full of
mistakes, yet in time for Christmas.
Maybe Mimi will make peppermint tea
again, and this time my song
won't have to be, "Sick! So sick!" Away from
home,
yes, but not pregnant this time. The choir
will sing; this time, I'll get to listen.
The heater comes on in the house. Listen
to the cold rain hitting the roof and knit
while my daughters sleep. Tastes sweet to be
at home -
to know the lights for Christmas,
on their timer, will glow while we're away -
to hear my daughter practice her song.
Breathe. Today it took a cup of Holiday Chai
tea
to get past the afternoon slump. Today's
tea
I kept hidden from the girl; didn't have to
listen
as she asked for some and return my sing-
song
"No, no. It has caffeine." My hands itched to
knit
today; I've almost finished the gray hat. And
Christmas
makes so many demands on my time at home.
We won't be at home,
so if I want the gingerbread tea
I'll bring it in that little tin. We leave
after both Christmas
choir performances, mine and hers. Nana can
listen
if I record my daughter's performance. I'll
wait to knit
my green sweater; we need to practice the
song.
Once, two college girls, on guitar and piano,
sang a song
together at one girl's family home.
One had taught the other how to knit,
and had made her soy milk-infused Earl Grey
tea
before they sat on the bedroom floor in their
apartment, where one girl could listen
to the other read a fantasy story and rest in
the comfort as cozy as Christmas.
She can still knit with those skills and can
still hear that song:
At Christmas time in her own grown-up home
she smells Earl Grey tea in a bottle of
bergamot and stops to listen.
I recently attended a house concert where I had the privilege of hearing my college roommate and friend from many years ago perform her own beautiful music. A singer-songwriter who plays guitar, she always had an interest in creating, writing, and singing, and she always had a knack for turning any space into "home." It is an amazing experience when one brief moment - such as listening to a song or smelling a specific scent - recalls to your mind years of previous moments, and they all get bundled up together into one new experience that you can open like a gift as your present circumstances seem to be put on pause. The past moments take on new meaning as you see them through the lens of all your current life, and your current life is blessed, as with a refreshing shower, with the sweetness of the memories. At Christmas time, especially, I think we experience life as being circular, so that our past and present can affect each other in our perception of them, and each can imbue the other with new flavor and richness.
A sestina, with its recurring words presented in a new order in each stanza, is very circle-like, and seemed to me the perfect form in which to attempt to express this experience of memory.
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