Mother's Day
Today I ate ribs and cake
at 8 p.m. with my family
and two flamenco dancers.
I couldn’t have predicted
the number of paintings,
to the very very ceiling
like jelly beans in the Louvre.
I couldn’t have guessed
I would feel so simple and full.
At dinner the flamenco dancer
told us her mother died
days before (at 102). She
knows it’s impossible
to prepare for the fact
that nothing you do matters.
That’s why she brought this cake.
Look at your daughter,
pounding it with a sledgehammer.
Happy Mother’s Day.
What else can you do.
Label Maker
It's all underneath
an impassable bone.
What she knows.
What we know.
What we think
we know and don't.
We light a match:
the sparks fly
and the sky looks
and smells of smoke.
But it's not smoke,
it's a new snow.
We'll never say that though.
We'll never know we should.
Moments like this
are everywhere,
no sense in sorting.
biography
LIZ HILDRETH’s poems, translations, and essays have been published in Hayden’s Ferry Review, McSweeney’s, Parthenon West, Michigan Quarterly Review, and Forklift, Ohio, among other places. She lives in Chicago and works as a writer in online education.