terra—
when i was a girl
i believed
gardening was just
pulling dirt out
of the ground—soaking
the soil, until a pool
released mud into
my cupped hands.
i probably thought
i was helping
when i threw it
to the ground—thought
gardening felt good
like the days
mom described—riding
bikes with over-alled
kids, through alleys
in el sereno—staying out
’til the streetlights came
on, coming home
to a meal—no one asking
where she’d been. dad
would say things like
to catch a sandcrab, stick
your hand in the sand
after a wave passes—always
say thank you
remember, nothing good
happens
after dark—and please—
never turn your back
to the ocean.
the first time
a boy stuck his hands
inside me, i felt
like the ocean—
something containing
everything, giving
very little at a time
to the most insatiable
waves. i think about
the stories i’d share
with the daughter
i’m afraid to have—
how little
they could prepare her.
*
Hailey Gross is a poet and educator from Los Angeles. She’s a recipient of the Sarah B. Marsh-Rebelo Scholarship for Poetry and the Prebys Poetry Creative Writing Endowed Scholarship and is currently in her final year of the MFA Creative Writing program at San Diego State University. Her work can be found or is forthcoming in the Los Angeles Review, Laurel Review, and Harpur Palate.