
Driving down that stretch of road
Where my bus used to carry me
Full backpack, heavy lunchbox,
Just past those big beautiful houses
That even as a child gave me longing sighs,
I look for places that no longer exist
Like the consignment shop
Where Mom and I would go
To pick up cardigans and turtlenecks
Unfolding jeans laid on hand me down shelves
Holding them up in the mirror before
Adding them to the pile of what we could afford.
As I pass through that stretch of shops—
Some of which have not changed—
I wonder, when I went clothes shopping as a child
What was Mom thinking
When she pulled her car up in that little gravel lot
Just a short walk to those gorgeous houses behind my school
As she held up outfits and asked with urgency
“Are you going to wear this?”
A question full of worries she never shared with me.
