For a Dancer

What do you say to a Mother who has forgotten how to dance,

It’s been two years,
And I promised myself every anniversary I’d write you a poem,
To guarantee your memory lasted longer than the trendiness of a pink wristband,
But this year,
I’ve decided to write one for your mother,
Whose melancholy calls like the lonely songs of ravens dressed upon her shoulder blades,
She wears black these days and I don’t blame her,
Her constant tears run like blood from virgin toes freshly en pointe,
And her eyes have cried out so much of their color,
When I gaze into those pale blue pupils,
They look more like binoculars staring at your first Nutcracker Ballet burned into a stage Across the back of her skull,

What do you say to a Mother who woke up one morning to find her little ballerina taking That last pirouette between a tree branch and the dance floor,
Graceful as ever 19 years kicking legs through the air,
A canon of limbs spinning in motion to Billie Holiday’s first commodore album,
Caught by her throat in time like a daughter’s last gasp of breath before defying gravity at A dance recital,
Those photos still line the walls of your home,
Every last one of them now a gorgeous face on a headstone,
And I wish your mother would bury those acrylic obituaries already,
Because she doesn’t need to be reminded of what your body looks like hanging there.

They say dancing is all about the line,
A choreographed path of righteousness
Ending at the crossroads between Heaven and damnation,
Your mother was always a good Christian,
But there’s a special place in hell for you,
So when she found you,
I heard she hesitated to let the paramedics cut you down,
Too afraid that that rope around your neck was the only thing holding you up in that audition with St. Peter we call judgement day,
Like a soul bungee jumping into Hades.

Maybe one day,
I will grow the courage to tell your mother
That these hands where the last to embrace your waist and slow dance to the rocking motion of a two step.
Tell me, whats more blasphemous:
To blame myself,
Or God almighty for making life a gift so precious,
That suicide was reserved for Jesus Christ,
And all those willing to be crucified,

But I’m still on my knees every night,
Palms to the sky,
Praying that someone up there bends the rules just this once,
If only so I can see you one more time.

But this poem isn’t about you,
It’s for your mother,
So that the next time I see her,
I have something more to give than an apology,
Because she has enough of those already.

So here it goes:
Brenda,
The world is not a stage fit for ballet,
But an endless waltz between life, death, and eternity,
Liz is a teen-angel,
Hugging the walls of heaven on prom night,
Waiting for her mother to give her that tap on her wings,
And offer her the first dance.

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