MY PARENTS
As I wander through the crowds
And watch the people around me
Some things come clearly into focus
And allow me the chance to truly see
I look at how people do things
In such interestingly different ways
That I reflect upon the way I do them
And my mind wanders back through the days
Granted, there are many ways of doing things
And one not always better than the rest
But some are clearly lacking
When exposed to the peril of life’s test
As I watch with an eye to learn
My wonder is stretched to the breach
Would I want to be a child born to some of them
If so, would happiness be within my reach
As a child, and the oldest one at that
My parents and I did not always agree
I thought my ways better than theirs
And they, their ways better for me
Things did not always run smoothly
As my parents and I made our way
Was it me or them who suffered the most
Back then, it was me, if I’d had the say
But now I am not only a parent
But a grandparent of those I hold dear
And so my vision of things has changed
It has become far more crystal clear
And so as I think of my parents
Even with their perceived mistakes
I can’t find cause to be critical of them
Because now I know what it takes
Raising me could not have been easy
My life a challenge to them both
But they stuck with it through thick and thin
And because they did, there was growth
If I were the child of some I’ve seen
I’m left to wonder how I would get by
Would I flounder about as they seem to do
Would I ever have the chance to fly
My own choices can chart my course
But the load would be much harder to bear
Could I even know how to succeed
Or would I fall into a pit of despair
So if I were to be born again
And had power to make that choice
I’d most certainly pick those who raised me once
And praise them with my loudest voice
I was the oldest of seven children. Seventeen years separated me from my youngest sibling, a brother. I didn’t get along particularly well with my parents. I truly was a challenge for them. I’ve even thought it a miracle that I have siblings after my parents experienced me. But from my youthful myopic point of view, they were a challenge for me. It has taken me decades to overcome some of my ill placed feelings for them. This poem is my tribute to them for pressing onward and raising a wonderful family. It is also represents a small measure of my apology to them for all the grief I surely caused them as I navigated childhood with a rebellious nature that seemed to incapacitate my personal compass. Any indictment of the struggles between me and my parents has long since nestled squarely on the shoulders of the guilty party; me.