Poets’ Corner, Thanksgiving: Rosemerry on Pies & Gratitude

Poets’ Corner, Thanksgiving: Rosemerry on Pies & Gratitude

On October 3, 1863, President Abraham Lincoln declared the final Thursday of November to be the national holiday of Thanksgiving, which evolved into a story of traditions old and new, a day of  family, feasting, and football. And all that is good, but is it good enough? Shouldn’t Thanksgiving be about more than that, a day to forget about the headlines and simply  count our blessings for the bounty in our lives? The following poems by Word Woman Rosemerry Trommer put the “thanks” back in Thanksgiving. And, according to an article in Time Magazine, “being thankful is strongly linked with both mental and physical health – and can help relieve stress, depression, and addiction, among other conditions.” Jess sayin…

Making Apple Pies with My Mother

We begin by talking for an hour
about the kids, her church, dad’s health,
and how we both cry when we see acts of kindness.

We clean the kitchen. Address one mess
before starting the next. Then we peel apples,
marvel at their size—how much larger

they must be than in the time of Fanny Farmer,
who thinks we might need eight tart apples
for our nine-inch crust. Fanny,

even a hundred years later,
you are still synonymous with precision,
organization and good food. And, as I recall,

you, too, practiced your art in your mother’s kitchen.
As it is, seven apples in 2018 are enough
to fill two generous crusts. Oh Fanny,

some things have changed, for instance
this Granny Smith, large as my fist. But some things
are exactly the same. A level teaspoon

is still a level teaspoon. The simplest recipes
are still often the best. And it’s still so good
to make a pie with your mother, talking

about all of life’s loose ends, measuring sugar,
filling the crusts, then cleaning up the mess
as the scent of sweetness touches everything.

 

Practice

To be grateful not only for flower,
but also for mud, grime,

slug, slime, the dingy,
the filthy, the tired,

to be grateful not only for star
but also for what is prickly, thornsome,

tricky, testy, sore,
to be grateful not only for warmth

but also for the cold that holds it,
the chill, the bite, the nip, the freeze,

the breeze that blows always head on.
To not only say thanks, but live it.

To not only know thanks, but give it.

3 Comments
  • Clint Viebrock
    Posted at 10:40h, 28 November

    Rosemerry, you’ve done it again- beautiful, pertinent poetry that so captures and even defines the moment. In addition, “Practice” completely complements what I am experiencing this Thanksgiving: I have learned that “the prickly and thornesome” are to be seen and celebrated as gifts, and thanks should be duly given. Thank you for your beautiful gift.

  • Sally Russell Warrington
    Posted at 06:41h, 30 November

    Rosemerry spreads the scent of sweetness everywhere. Thank you!

    • admin
      Posted at 11:09h, 30 November

      Totally agree. Thanks for the comment.