It used to sting my bones
when someone called me “selfish”
for not having had children,
and it has taken me years
to learn how to say
what I have always known.
Now that I am
this far from the beginning
and this close to the end,
I will say it and be at rest.
Wherever you are now,
you who were unborn to me,
my unknown child or children,
I say this:
you are blessed,
for our absent, never-was bond
would have been a mistake
made of lightning:
immediate fire consuming all,
echoing ever after.
No one could have survived.
Be glad forever, wherever you are,
that you are not my children, that I am no
father of yours; that my storms were not yours,
that my slow burn-down was not yours as well;
that whatever tenderness
we may have felt for each other
was not wasted into ash. Be glad
that while I did not know how
to speak of it,
I understood it well enough
to keep it from happening again.

September 19th, 2015 at 12:52 pm
Beautiful, touching, honest, and most likely very very wise. Not everyone is cut out for having children anymore than everyone is cut out for marriage or for being a monk or loving the opposite gender. Your poetry is a gift of nurture, wisdom, honesty, warning, inquiry, freedom, and self for many “children.” At 78 I’m probably one of your older children, but I am grateful for whom you turned out to be and your willingness to make a hard choice so you could give what you have of value to so many.
September 19th, 2015 at 12:56 pm
Well…thank you.