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Poetry | April 2018

The Misery of Parenthood

By Preeti Parikh

It festered not in the solitude of endless carpools,
it abounded not on the raucous sidelines of soccer games.
It lay not in the bottomless lunch boxes demanding novelty
nor lurked in the grim fairy tales that threatened to gobble up dreams.
It permeated not through the perpetual wetness of a crib
nor suffused the frigid valley of lost hats, mittens and jackets.
Doctor’s visits, pending homework assignments, and a litany
of piano and dance lessons had not corroded our insides.

What gnawed away was the suspicion that the worst in us
was preserved in pristine dormancy in these whole other beings.
We’d repeated the mistakes our progenitors had made before us,
unkept our avowals and squandered our numerous redemptions.
The cruel promise of procreation had seemed the summation of it all.
And yet, we’d often ask, from where came all the goodness in them?

1 reply on “The Misery of Parenthood”

Josays:
October 1, 2020 at 4:44 pm

I don’t think anyone has ever said it more beautifully or, most importantly, nailed it like you did, I am reading this and crying..

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