Women Do This Every Day

 

At the park I look for Levita,

because our work is the same—

swaying wide-legged over foraging toddlers,

we avert bruises, discourage the consumption

of found objects, interpret primordial languages,

serve fruit from hastily filled containers,

and trade a few stories and questions, so I know

 

that it's not the same work,

because the toddler is her employer’s,

and evenings she goes to a small apartment, crammed with roommates

who are also working thousands of kilometers from home,

and she tells me of a mountain farm, and shrimp paste, and her wish

for dental work, and we laugh, having the same missing molar,

and I tell her about camping, and I never think to ask if she has children,

because I still underestimate the violence,

 

but they are six and three she says one morning,

early in the fall when we are waving wasps from the cut apples,

and the youngest doesn't remember her, and then she takes my dismay

for condemnation, and says furiously they are not like children here,

the older one can cook, the little one can sweep,

and my girl wants to nurse, and I’m apologizing senselessly

for everything I ever haven’t done.

 

 

Bibliographical info

Sadiqa de Meijer, "Women Do This Every Day". Copyright © 2020 by Sadiqa de Meijer. Reprinted with permission of the publisher.

Source: The outer wards (Sadiqa de Meijer /  Signal Editions/Véhicule Press, 2020)

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