Articles, Essays and Poems by Susan
Thin Skinned
Poem
Mother tells me, you are too sensitive She watches my heart shatter At the blushing of a setting sun As tulips fade, as eagle snags a sparrow Thin-skinned she says. I cry at headlines Hardhats Demolish Native Oak Terrorists Bomb Ice Cream Parlor Thirty-one flavors of violence People, children, an infant die What about the passersby? Mother sees my heart in tatters Too sensitive, she scolds. Maybe she is right But am I the only one? Surely some general aches as he flattens native growth – Human growth A suicide bomber must have a mother Does she think he is thin-skinned? What about Arafat? What about Sharon? What about the soldiers? I hear peace workers visited the desert compound As the leaders talk and talk and talk A young woman spies the Kleenex Does Yassar Arafat cry? I want these men to weep when a baby’s blossom fades When the sun descends blood-red When a church is torn asunder. Mother tells me I am too sensitive But I grow fond of saying It is a good thing.
Sue Reuling Furness 5/13/02 rev. 6/06/02
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