Love Letter from Inside Fatherhood
By Fritz Ward
Inside the trap, I spend weeks
remodeling the haven you’ll haunt.
Not for the joy of it,
but for the wonder
that keeps snapping
my neck.
Come December,
there’s a morning
when the sun slathers
the bare trees in saffron
and I hold you
more delicately
than I’ve ever held myself.
See how we’ve risen
before the moon has fallen?
See how we’ve nested and itched?
The boringness of it all
has infected us with wonder,
with want, with why?
And yet all of it—the blood
vocabulary, the fibroid angel,
the cries echoing
from birth and back—
all of it just beyond
our understanding—
our stranding.
But the truth
I don’t want
to tell you
is that you matter
more, then less,
then more—
and all of this
is breakable
and already
broken.
Source: Poetry (September 2021)