—After Mary Ruefle
All my life I felt a heavy hand
pushing some thoughts out
through the plushy curtains
of this or that opera house
and holding other thoughts back
with a shepherd’s crook and a firm
hand, or a firm look that says
Quiet. Still, I was grateful
that I had decided some thoughts
are worth the water and snackpacks
it takes to keep them alive.
When I watched television
I saw other people’s decisions
in motion: This one decides to keep
her baby; that one decides he will never again
leave his home. Even when I was not being
a poet, I was deciding how early to wake—
how early to begin the business of approving
and disapproving of the shapes
I’d let my person take.