Not So Easy Come, Not So Easy Go

The nest appeared before I noticed it being built. There it was, suddenly fully formed, all twig and leaf and bits of branch, tucked on an overhang below our front porch roof, right by our front door. Every time we left the house, every time we came in, the parent robin swooped out, perched on a branch nearby, always the same branch, a watchful eye, a chirp.

Maybe there are no eggs yet, we thought. Maybe there’s still time to move it. It’s a nuisance, having birds right by your door—the wings flapping, and the bird poop everywhere. I was cleaning the poop off the windows beside our front door, cleaning it off the floor.

My father and husband took out the ladder, peered inside, took a picture: four blue eggs, already there. Too late to stop this.

I left for a nine-day trip, and when I returned home, there they were, suddenly full formed, all soft head and tiny beak and closed eyes. Only two. The parent robin (a mom, I decided, though the truth was I didn’t know) still swooped out every time we left the house, every time we came in, but now her chirping grew more frantic as she perched on her branch nearby, the same watchful eye, and now I felt like a thief going in and out. “I’m sorry,” I said to her, I said to her babies. I did my best to quietly open the door.

Still, I got used to it, the flapping of wings, the bird poop, and even when inside the house, I’d hear the chirp of the parent robin. Or were there two? I started watching from my picture window, close to the front door. There was one pecking on the ground, another on the same old branch. They stayed nearby, all day, swooping in and out of the nest. I started listening for them. The robin chirps punctuated my day, my hour, sometimes even my minutes.

And then one morning, I walked from my front yard onto my front porch, approaching my front door, but I must not have been quiet enough, and suddenly there were wings and wings and wings tumbling from the nest: the parents flapped out and swooped away, and the two babies flapped out, too, but not away. They only made it to my front porch floor, and when they fluttered again, they couldn’t lift more than a few inches. I panicked, chastising myself for not having been gentler, slower. What should I do?

My husband said to leave them alone. But I didn’t want to. I wanted to lift them back into their nest. I waited. I waited more. From inside, I watched the baby birds hop around my front porch for a while, but the sun was getting strong. What should I do? I filled a shallow dish with water, went out my back door and walked around the side of the house to the front and placed it as softly as I could onto the porch, walked around to the back of the house again. “Don’t go out the front,” I told my husband. For hours, I fretted, flapping my own worry wings. The parent birds chirped and hopped around nearby, close to the porch. Then, one by one, the baby birds hopped off the porch and disappeared beneath our boxwood, into our bed of St. John’s wort.

By mid-afternoon, the chirping had gone away. I stepped out front: no parent birds, no baby birds. Were they all okay? I listened for the robin chirps the rest of the day and the next.

“I miss them,” I told my husband.

Now I still miss them. I’m still listening. I’m still learning.

And isn’t this what we all have to do? Learn to let them come. And then let them more easily go.

Photo is not of our robin eggs. Photo credit: Brice Curry from Unsplash.com


A Lunchtime Workshop Series in Flash Nonfiction

Memoir & Personal Essay Summer Bootcamp

The Art of Memoir & Personal Essay: A Generative Weeklong Workshop
Monday-Friday, June 20-June 24
(meeting daily 9:30-11 a.m. ET and 2:30-4:30/5 p.m. ET)
It’s time for a summer writing bootcamp! Join me in this online (Zoom) workshop during which you will meet other writers, generate new writing, read chapters and essays that inspire, and learn tools and techniques on the craft of personal essay/memoir writing. There are no critiques in this workshop. The goal is for you to leave with first drafts and a writer’s toolbox ready to help you finish and write the rest of your life stories. Space is limited. EARLY BIRD RATE ENDS ON MAY 30. Learn more here.

Beginners

Vegetables in a crate

It’s the start of gardening season, so this seemed like the right time for this poem.

This one’s about thinking back to a time when you were a novice gardener, but it’s also about thinking back to a time when you were just starting a long-term, serious relationship, maybe even a marriage, but at that point, at the beginning, you didn’t know yet how hard it might be, what obstacles you might face, and you thought—back then—that you and your partner had all the answers.

This poem was written by yours truly, Shuly Xóchitl Cawood, and is in my poetry collection, Trouble Can Be So Beautiful at the Beginning (Mercer University Press, 2021), winner of the Adrienne Bond Award for Poetry.

Readers, thank you for coming along with me every April—National Poetry Month—on my poetry jaunt. I hope the poems I shared piqued your interest in poetry, if it needed to be piqued, and that it showed you that a really great poem can be accessible to all. 

If you missed the other poems I featured, you can find them here and here and here and here.

Photo credit: Zoe Schaeffer from Unsplash.com


Upcoming Online Writing Workshops

The Art of Memoir & Personal Essay: A Generative Weeklong Workshop
Monday-Friday, June 20-June 24, 2022
(meeting daily 9:30-11 a.m. ET and 2:30-4:30 p.m. ET)
It’s time for a summer writing bootcamp! Join me in this online (Zoom) workshop during which you will meet other writers, generate new writing, read chapters and essays that inspire, and learn tools and techniques on the craft of personal essay/memoir writing. There are no critiques in this workshop. The goal is for you to leave with first drafts and a writer’s toolbox ready to help you finish and write the rest of your life stories. Space is limited. Cost: $349; early bird rate going now: $279. Learn more here. REGISTER HERE.

Let’s Write Together!
Tuesdays at noon EST (on Zoom): May 3, 10, 17, 24, 31
Having a hard time finding inspiration and motivation to write? Join me for any (or all) of these online one-hour sessions on Tuesdays at noon EST. We’ll talk about a piece of writing, I will give you a prompt, and then you will WRITE in the genre of your choosing. These workshops are in partnership with Press 53. Cost: $10/session. Register for any of them here.

"These workshops have been excellent, and they are exactly what I need in the middle of my busy work day." —J.B.

A Lunchtime Workshop Series in Flash Nonfiction


A Conversation with John Valeri,
on Central Booking

I had the good fortune of talking with John Valeri about poetry and writing. As always, he was warm and kind, and he made me laugh, which is always a wonderful thing. (Click on the image to get the video.)

 
 

All Your Lives, Your Sister and You 
Wore Long Braids

If you’re lucky, people in your life teach you things by example, like how to be strong and how to be brave. I had a friend who, when diagnosed with cancer and given a terrible prognosis, said to me, “Well, everyone dies eventually. It’s just a matter of when.” I have another friend who sold her house and so many of her belongings and moved solo across the country because she needed a life change. I have yet another friend who lost her father when he was too young and later her mother, and she grieved but she also got out of bed the next morning and took care of her son. 

If you’re lucky, and willing, you take these lessons and get a little braver and stronger yourself. And if you’re very lucky, your family members teach you, too. I’m one of the very lucky ones. My parents and sister have taught me how to be strong and brave and to have faith in myself.

The following poem by Jin Cordaro made me think about all these things. I read it months ago for the first time, yet it’s a poem I found so remarkable it hasn’t left me since:

This poem was first published in Cider Press Review and is reprinted here with permission from the poet. The title of this blog is the title of this poem. Thank you, Jin Cordaro, for this stunning poem. It’s become one of my all-time favorites.

It’s National Poetry Month. Every week during the month of April, I have shared a poem I love from a contemporary writer. I hope it piqued your interest in poetry, if it needed to be piqued, and that it showed you that a really great poem can be accessible to all. 

For next week, our final NPM week, I will be sharing a poem of my own.

If you missed the other poems I featured, you can find them here and here and here.

“See” you all next week!

Photo credit: Edan Cohen from Unsplash.com


Upcoming Online Writing Workshops

Tuesdays at Noon: Let's Write Together

Let’s Write Together!
Tuesdays at noon EST (on Zoom): April 26; May 3, 10, 17, 24, 31
Having a hard time finding inspiration and motivation to write? Join me for any (or all) of these online one-hour sessions on Tuesdays at noon EST. We’ll talk about a piece of writing, I will give you a prompt, and then you will WRITE in the genre of your choosing. These workshops are in partnership with Press 53. Cost: $10/session. Register for any of them here.

"These workshops have been excellent, and they are exactly what I need in the middle of my busy work day." —J.B.