MOVING OUT
The books are packed,
taken from the shelves
where they have sat
for years, their titles
waking memories
with their silent words.
I’ve taken down paintings from the walls,
and photographs of my children,
their youthful skin from years ago
now showing wrinkles
as I place their pictures in a box,
and now the walls are bare,
the memories to be carried
to another wall, somewhere.
I’ve emptied out the drawers
of batteries and tablecloths,
old notebooks and candles,
souvenirs from trips
and coins from foreign countries,
unspent and useless now,
except for memories now gathered
to be taken someplace new.
I look at shirts and sweaters,
boots, old shoes, a jacket
I can’t remember ever wearing,
a vest worn at someone’s wedding
I heard is now divorced,
and know I want to purge myself of clothes
and stuff I no longer need or want,
to sort out the items of my life,
the remnants that weigh me down
with baggage from another time,
when what I want is lightness
and a happy heart that comes
from moving on, not moving out.
And so, I sit here at this table
where I write and eat
and watch the birds and squirrels
and look around,
glancing at the wood stove where the fire
no longer burns,
and at the couch and chair
that soon will leave dust balls on the floor
in an empty room where I have lived and loved,
and I swallow what I cannot say
knowing I will take with me
the only thing that matters.