I
am skipping ahead to Poetry Postcard 43. Why? To wish a happy 16th
birthday to our son and eldest child, Robbie.
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Robbie and cousin Caspian (age 1). All you parents of teen boys know, photos of the kid are not easy to come by. Most of them look like this: |
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because teenage boys are masters at the art of avoiding photographs. Remember "How not to be seen?" |
I wish my scanner were working this morning so I could show you what a cute baby he was, and how the nurses put Valentines in his hospital bassinet.
I
was planning to write an occasional poem for Valentine’s Day today. I had a
vintage Valentine’s postcard all set. (Thanks for the donation, Linda Baie!)
But
my poetry gut got all tingly when I read what was printed on the back of the
card: THIS SIDE FOR CORRESPONDENCE.
A
few weeks after I started the Poetry Postcard Project, I took an old
mini-album off the bookshelf. Instead of photographs, we’ve kept years of postcards in the
album’s sleeves.
Some of the postcards date to before Rob and I married, 1991. The most recent cards date from the late 2000s. They come from all over
the U.S. and several countries. They were sent to us by friends and family.
Postcards sent from (clockwise) Aruba, Hawaii, Tennessee, and Australia. |
Reading
through the messages on the cards, I was surprised that many go beyond the standard “Wish
you were here,” sentiment. Some are funny. Some are lyrical. Others refer to
specific events in our lives.
Guided
by the phrase, “This Side for Correspondence,” I began pulling sentences and
greetings from various postcards into a found poem. It wasn’t until I read a mention
of Robbie’s impending birth that the theme of my poem came together. That focus
allowed me to figure out which pieces of the poem would stay and what could go.
This Side for Correspondence:
Postcards “Found” on My Son’s 16th
Birthday
Dear Ones,
Greetings from
Aruba.
We are alive
& well.
The food is
good. So glad
we are here, but
miss you.
It’s really as
beautiful here
as the picture
depicts.
Balmy breezes,
the smell
of jasmine in
the evening.
The way people
get still and
quiet
watching the sun
setting.
There are a lot
of cranky babies
here.
You sure you
want
to go through
with this?
Laura Shovan
And here are the
cards I borrowed from, sent from my brother Jason Dickson, friends Jenna and
Ron Olson, and two from my mother, Pauline Dickson. Thanks for helping me out
on this one, gang!
"So glad we are here. But miss you." |
"Dear Ones... Balmy breezes, the smell of jasmine in the evening, the way people get still & quiet watching the sun setting." |
"It's really as beautiful here as the picture depicts... There are a lot of cranky babies here -- you sure you want to go through with this?" |
"We are alive & well.... The food is good." |
I like the way the stillness my mother wrote about from Hawaii balances with my friend Jenna's half-joking concerns about the potentially cranky baby on his way to us. (You can read the postcard poem written for my daughter's birthday here.)
Robbie is already thinking ahead to college, so I'm going to enjoy these birthdays while he is still at home. I am looking forward to Robbie's favorite things tonight: pizza and a rich chocolate cake. If I'm lucky, I'll get a hug. And maybe a photograph.
Postcard
Information:
THIS SIDE FOR
CORRESPONDENCE.
Series No. 2425
PRINTED IN GERMANY
THE ADDRESS TO
BE WRITTEN ON THIS SIDE.