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Archive for August 15th, 2025

The Roundup today is hosted by Heidi Mordhorst at My Juicy Little Universe. We switched dates, so I will round up on Friday, Sept. 5th.
My mother at the piano

After Packing my Suitcase for the Funeral

Then I turn to a portrait
of you at the piano (Were you 12 or 13?),
your smile the same one I saw
in the last days
when moving
was hard. Your long fingers
like a metronome holding rhythm
on the bedding. At the funeral,
we will cry. We will let you go,
ashes to ashes and all.
Sing you into heaven
and praise the glow
of the summer sky.

Margaret Simon, draft

Today I will be traveling to Mississippi where our family will gather and celebrate the life of my mother. I can’t seem to write a poem this summer that does not have her in it. Forgive me, but it seems necessary at this time.

Tabatha Yeatts of The Opposite of Indifference coordinates a poetry exchange. She sent me a poem she wrote based on a podcast she heard and thought of me. I love this Poetry Friday community and how we share poems as well as life events. Thanks, Tabatha for sharing your creativity with me.

Butterfly children 

by Tabatha Yeatts

 

Jo Nagai, boy-scientist, 

believed in love-memory, 

 

thought his caterpillars greeted him  

after becoming aeronauts, hovering 

close as though he was 

a dark-eyed flower.  

 

Their memory not wing-scale thin, 

but thick as honey.

 

He loved the before,  

the tickle of their round bodies 

held on his arm as he conducted his tests  

so he shared their small pulse of discomfort. 

 

He loved the after,

the wobbly wings,  

 

the legs slim as a kite’s string.  

Jo noted everything,  

page after page,  

 

as the butterflies responded  

the same as their caterpillar child-selves.

 

No matter how great the metamorphosis 

of being swaddled in the chrysalis  

and rebuilt in the soup of creation,  

 

even into the next generation, 

young butterflies swooped into  

the future’s flowers with messages  

from their ancestors: 

 

before you break open, 

here’s what I know. 

 

 

 

Inspired by Radiolab’s episode “Signal Hill: Caterpillar Roadshow” about a Japanese second-grader who scientifically studied what butterflies can remember.

One of my recent monarchs, “legs slim as a kite’s string.”

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