Farming
My father grew up on farms in Illinois.
His three brothers all became farmers.
That is what they knew.
He rebelled and became a minister.
As to myself, from the age of ten,
I planted and cultivated a garden
for about five years.
It occupied two city lots.
I dearly loved working with my grandmother
or if alone,
would sometimes sing to myself.
My singing embarrassed my mother.
I thought about becoming a farmer.
My uncle shut that off.
Said I didn’t have enough money.
So, instead, I became a poet.
Now I’m growing poems.
If that seems strange,
then think about writing as ploughing
or planting grain.
Then, remember what once was called “threshing.”
Think of all the dust created in the process.
The mess! The muss!
The necessity of constantly rewriting
as a kind of weeding in the need to keep images clean.
Think how often crops get wiped out
before they ripen,
destroyed by hail or frost.
So still think of myself as a farmer,
the gambles made
against insects and inclement weather,
also the grace
needed to get poems to market when the time is right.
It can certainly make you old!
But also bold…as every good farmer must be.