Grandmothers
Grandmothers are special people
Never knew either grandfathers.
Soldier.
Preacher.
I had one mean grandmother and one nice.
Tall, slender, deaf and blind
As a child I took care of the nice one.
She stayed with us I slept next to the portable urinal
With the Pine-Sol and stool aroma.
All slept
My job was to make sure she didn’t miss or fall
The smell of piss dried on plastic covered floors and days my feet were splattered.
So what. I loved Grandmother.
The mean one, another slap.
Story.
I’d tuck her into bed and kiss her forehead and wipe my feet on the sheets
To see my Grandmother’s breathing rise and fall gave me peace
Seven.
And then then my big sister would wet the bed.
Another day at school smelling like dried piss
I had no friends
The kind teacher would wash the odor
Give me fresh underwear
The blind sisters
Piss poor
but we loved our Grandmother.
She gently felt our faces and gave tight hugs
Cleaning my Grandmothers dentures, brushing her hair with a part
Down the center and two plaits rolled
In back to the nape of her neck.
Her bamboo rocking chair was home in the corner.
I can still hear it creak.