On Having Chosen Childlessness

Cathlin Noonan
| poetry

 

I face the clot of horizon, feet sunk deeper
++in every wake, to consider the ocean. How
++++she moves—laps forward. The whole going

nowhere. Her body lifts. Foil
++from a cookout, the Clorox bottle cap,
++++Barbie’s head, a synthetic belt, and, yes,

the loose top-layer of sand, before settling
++it all down again. Cradle of her
++++ridges. Perhaps when I’m older I will stop

trying so hard to remember
++a future without me in it. I find
++++I long for another shore, overcast

verge of a deeper shade, the half-grain
++finer grit. My heels soft plums again.
++++I think of my daughter’s face turned

up and her small fingers. I see
++my full round palm, their cup.
++++Between the limestone crag and sea,

we catch shells, break-thrown jetsam
++in the bed of our plastic bucket. Sometimes
++++I see also myself at the waterline,

split in two. There on the narrow wash
++of sandbar with her in tow. But also there
++++fixed, inching under into the ground’s

slow swallow. The sweet astringence. I enter
++this other time—sour cut of fruit
++++between front teeth. I lock my muscles here

in that tender bite. If my mother is right, this is fated.
++Faith—a preservation like the wholeness
++++of a blue bottle cap parting a century of sand—

let algae soon devour it. All that plastic,
++shrink it to small remains. Nourish
++++a future I long to be homesick for.

Cathlin Noonan (she/her) is a poet based out of San Antonio, TX. Her poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in Crazyhorse, Denver Quarterly, Meridian, Pidgeonholes, and Small Orange Journal, among others. She is assistant poetry editor for The Night Heron Barks and associate editor for Ran Off With the Star Bassoon.

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