ModestoView

Serving Civic Pride Since 1997

PoetryView – Let the Games Begin

Let The Games Begin by Sam Pierstorff MJC Professor of English, Ninja Poet Warrior and ModestoView Poet Laureate

This is for the first letter learned—etched with a fist around a blunt pencil, circling the page like a tornado.

His name is Oscar, and these are his Os, drawn like targets or springs bouncing across a page.

And this is for Violet, her Vs like empty sugar cones, the arrow of her initial pointing down though her head is always up.

This is for the first syllable of the first song on the first day of preschool.

This is for the hug at the door—and for the first kid who cries when he arrives and when he leaves.

This is for the child who is safe now—whose neighborhood walls are crumbling under the weight of poverty and divorce.

This is for the kid who has felt a leather belt against his bottom, or an open hand across the same lips God made to smile.

But this is not where the story ends. This is where it begins.

This is for the sandbox where castles are first built— where boys become kings and girls do not wait for a prince to feel alive.

This is for blue food coloring that turns water into oceans, and for glue that makes imagination stick to brown paper bags. Yolanda makes a puppet with curly black hair like her own. Kevin makes a wolf. All morning he howls.

Today, pencils are sharpened for tracing the alphabet. Tomorrow, the Pulitzer Prize. Before the Sistine Chapel, there were finger-paints. Before ballet, the Hokey Pokey was what it was all about.

So this is for the teachers who will lead marches across grass even in the rain and strum guitars, the room echoing with the voices of children who should never be told to shut-up.

This is for the surrogate mothers and fathers of America— the teachers—who will play all day on bended knees so our kids can stand tall for the rest of their lives.

Caption: Sam Pierstorff and his wife Ruhi Sheikh