Catch me a star, little spaceman,
he’d call, and I’d catch a breath of whiskey
and hand-rolled cigarettes, mingled
with the sweat of his shirt
as I tumbled back into strong hands.
My father would launch me
to the ceiling and ask,
How do the stars look up there?
And they were bright, the stars,
like his eyes far below. Bright
like the glint of his wedding band,
marking a safe place to land.
He’d hold me over his head, my arms
outstretched like Superman, whoosh
me all over the room. We’d loop and soar
until his strength gave out, somewhere
in the world below. Down in the world
where I stand tonight, my son whizzing by overhead—
wide eyes on the horizon, seeing galaxies
beyond the man gazing up and asking,
How do the stars look up there?
Ryan Stone

♥️♥️♥️
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Must be nice, to have, these wonderful memories you’d made from your, childhood, with your, father.
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Unfortunately not. Glad it felt that way though. Thank you for reading 🙂
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I hope you are really doing that with your son, if you have one. This is a sweet poem. When you put a picture like that in your mind, even if it didn’t happen, you begin to behave as if it did happen. One of the unintended consequences of writing.
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Great insight. Thank you for reading and commenting – it’s greatly appreciated
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I like this one a lot
Sent from my iPhone
>
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Steve! Hi. Thanks for reading. Hope you’ve been well 🙂
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Your poem made me think – about the mistakes of one generation and whether the next tries harder to do better or is mostly terrified that they might repeat the same… your imagery is perfect here.
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Thank you, Rajani. I’m so glad that’s how it came across. Exactly as intended – trying to give my boys the childhood I didn’t have 🙂
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Oh it resonated at many levels- glad you’re back online, always good to read your work.
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