by Norman Rockwell |
I welcome you to join me, if you like! I've divided the prompts by month, and the plan is to respond to 3 (or so) a week. For some of these I may write poems, for others prose. The important thing is to mine my memory. Who knows where this exploration will lead?
In January I wrote about: apron, bar, basketball, bed, bicycle, birthday, boat, broom, button, cake, car.
February's prompts are chair, chlorine, church, concert, cookbook, couch, dancing, desk, dessert, dining room table, diploma.
DINING
ROOM TABLE
We
ate at the kitchen
table, as none of the homes I remember from my childhood had a
dedicated dining room. In the Burns Lane house in Birmingham, Alabama
(the last home I shared with my family of origin), we had to walk
through the kitchen through a narrow opening to get to the table
which just fit between the stove and bay window. (I believe the table
was oak, and oval-shaped, with a leaf that never came out, because
our family of 7 needed all the space we could get!)
For
Sunday meals we would crowd around, all scraping chairs and bumping
elbows to behold the table covered in dishes: pot roast (which my
mother prepared in the morning, so that it could cook in the oven at
325 degrees while we attended church), pear salad (a lettuce leaf
topped with a canned pear half then sprinkled with grated cheddar
cheese), rolls.
We joined hands and someone – my father, usually--
would say the blessing, that went something like this: “Thank
you,
Lord, for the food
we
are about to receive, and for the nourishment
to
our
bodies.
For Christ's sake, Amen.” We all chorused “A-men,” with a long A,
and then we dug in. We passed the dishes counter-clockwise around the
table so that everyone could get their portion. We talked, we
laughed, we teased... these Rockwell moments never lasted long, but I
do treasure them. I'm grateful to my parents for their efforts toward
making these traditions a part of us.
The
poem “Family Dinner” in CAN I TOUCH YOUR HAIR? (with Charles Waters) also chronicles a
family dinner tradition, though it wasn't one from my childhood but from my parenthood:
art by Sean Qualls and Selina Alko |
And here is a new poem:
Kitchen
Table
I've
known card games,
homework
all
sorts of stains
and
scratches.
The
busy hum
of
a sewing machine
quick
click
of
a calculator.
I've
endured tears,
fists,
easy
swipes
and
hard polishes.
But
nothing compares
to
Sundays
when
the plates
sit
heavy,
warm
when
the jostling
and
chair scraping
has
stopped
and
they all link hands,
resting
them ever so lightly
on
my face
and
someone says,
thank
you thank you
A-men.
- Irene Latham
Love that you wrote a poem from the kitchen table's point-of-view! thank you xo
ReplyDeleteso many images flashed in my mine when I read this... it's not just good, it's grab you heart and squeeze good.
ReplyDeleteAll of this is special, and I love that kitchen table speaking to us readers, too, layers of memories like so many of us have. Nice to read, Irene.
ReplyDelete