the women in my family
are known to be most stubborn at death’s door
our fingers claw at the frame of the exit, and our legs dig into life’s floor, go rooted
—–we will not be pulled through before we are ready to go
but do not mistake this refusal for rudeness
no, it is politeness in the extreme
we simply must say all of our goodbyes before we leave the party
the mourning chorus
back in my childhood bedroom on the night of my grandma’s death, i can’t fall asleep. for hours i lie still, reeling, staring at darkness. i want to remember everything. and then the birds start up their wild chirping, so many different types of songbirds. then the roosters join the racket. i think i have never heard so many birds calling out morning before, so loudly, all wailing and screaming. after the sun comes up and the birds finally go quiet, i close my eyes.
tough terrain preserves itself
a stand of trees
is island
outlined
in crop script
a farm forest
holds a sinkhole big enough to swallow a wheel
fossils tilled up
are tossed in
with newer bones
in the old days, this land was a sea
della watson is the co-author of Everything Reused in the Sea: The Crow and Benjamin Letters (Mission Cleaners Books, 2013) and a founding member of the Bay Area Correspondence School, an epistolary arts organization.