Balancing Whims
A poem by L. Lois
Balancing Whims
my father
was an accountant
he ran his life
by the book
statistical
odds and calculation
ruled decisions
fun a by-product remainder
we consumed
by logic
were controlled
through precision
but, at Christmas
old Mrs. Alder
came for dinner
and a drink by the tree
I’ve forgotten
my presents
though not the
glorious excitement
and always
one card
perched on a branch
waiting patiently
my father’s slanted,
exquisite
fountain pen script
beckoned on the envelope
“to Mrs. Alder…
from all of us.”
extravagance tucked inside:
her beloved lotto ticket
and I remember
the year she won
and her insistence on sharing
with my father
an accountant’s
regulations of love
infused with
a widow’s magic belief

About the Author:
L. Lois lives in an urban hermitage where trauma-informed themes flow during long walks by the ocean. She is pivoting through her grandmother-era, figuring out why her bevy of adult children don’t have babies, nor time. Previous essays have been featured in Canada’s Globe and Mail, her poetry on In Parentheses and in Woodland Pattern’s 30th Annual Poetry Marathon
Poetry Breakfast publishes a new poem every weekday morning.
If you’d like your poems considered for publication visit our Poetry Submissions page.
Follow Poetry Breakfast
Facebook
June 11, 2024 at 12:36 PM
happy poem, happy language
LikeLike
June 10, 2024 at 11:26 AM
Charmingly logical and evocative!
LikeLike