poem for parents
Gia Bharadwaj
Newton, MA, USA
The Winsor School
Poetry
poem for parents
So I stand on the sidewalk, peeling cuticles
and finger brushing my hot forehead. So I wait
for your Honda honk from behind my back
to make me fear wheels. So when you holler
Hey G from the open window I feel the whisper
of my mother’s stirring spoon in your sun spotted
hands. The cool car stings my mouth. I almost
choke. So I can’t stop watching myself, all big
nosed, in the rear-view mirror. So you’ve got
spoiled gobstoppers in the cupholder. I think
if I chew one will I ever chew again. So: wet inked
grocery receipts, fuzzy dice and stray quarters.
So I meet the eyes of a homeless man during
traffic, so you step on the gas. So I saw him weep
gobstoppers. So you dial to gospel radio and it’s
I love Jesus, Jesus saves in thick jazz. So Jesus
is a righteous gobstopper. So you sing and hum
along, the steering wheel is a piano. So I fear
you. So two women walk their dog beside barbed
wire and cradle palms like pink-skinned babies.
So when we pass a cemetery and a song cuts on Jesus,
you say G, I’m telling you, it’s those goddamn demons
again. The music crawls back white maggots
at my neck. So I’m gobstopper bruised,
I’m flatlining on your upholstery, I’m sick
with unbelief. So I think of you pushing
my stroller, pushing my swing into whiskers
of cloud and the stale taste of a pacifier. I wonder
if you’d love me if you knew I was gay
or call it bullshit. The woman on the radio
just found god, so I wonder if you know
I never will. There’s no spit left in my throat.
So you can’t hear me. So you just hum and tap
your toes, dizzy with Jesus as my teeth rot.
EDITORIAL PRAISE
“poem for parents” roots you to the spot. Its style is riveting, with the aggression and sharpness it imbues into a superficially simple scene, and its content is even more emotive. You can visualize every tense heartbeat of its car ride, every silent grief this child feels for their parent. You’ll find yourself lost in this piece’s ebb and flow—and… let’s just say you won’t look at gobstoppers the same way by the end.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Gia Bharadwaj is a high school student from Boston, Massachusetts. An alum of the Adroit Journal Summer Mentorship, she has been published in the Galliard International Review, Crashtest, and The Augment Review, among other literary journals. She also co-founded Chinchilla Lit, a magazine spotlighting young writers. Gia enjoys baking and hanging out with friends in her free time.