Thanking My Mother for Piano Lessons

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The relief of putting your fingers on the keyboard, 
as if you were walking on the beach
and found a diamond
as big as a shoe;

as if
you had just built a wooden table
and the smell of sawdust was in the air, 
your hands dry and woody;

as if
you had eluded
the man in the dark hat who had been following you 
all week;

the relief
of putting your fingers on the keyboard, 
playing the chords of
Beethoven,
Bach,
Chopin
 in an afternoon when I had no one to talk to,
 when the magazine advertisement forms of soft sweaters 
 and clean shining Republican middle-class hair
 walked into carpeted houses 
 and left me alone
 with bare floors and a few books

I want to thank my mother 
for working every day
in a drab office
in garages and water companies
cutting the cream out of her coffee at 40
to lose weight, her heavy body
writing its delicate bookkeeper’s ledgers
alone, with no man to look at her face, 
her body, her prematurely white hair 
in love
 I want to thank
my mother for working and always paying for 
my piano lessons
before she paid the Bank of America loan 
or bought the groceries
or had our old rattling Ford repaired.

I was a quiet child,
afraid of walking into a store alone,
afraid of the water,
the sun,
the dirty weeds in back yards,
afraid of my mother’s bad breath,
and afraid of my father’s occasional visits home, 
knowing he would leave again;
afraid of not having any money,
afraid of my clumsy body,
that I knew
 no one would ever love

But I played my way
on the old upright piano
obtained for $10,
played my way through fear,
through ugliness,
through growing up in a world of dime-store purchases, 
and a desire to love
a loveless world.

I played my way through an ugly face
and lonely afternoons, days, evenings, nights, 
mornings even, empty
as a rusty coffee can,
played my way through the rustles of spring
and wanted everything around me to shimmer like the narrow tide 
on a flat beach at sunset in Southern California,
I played my way through
an empty father’s hat in my mother’s closet
and a bed she slept on only one side of,
never wrinkling an inch of
the other side,
waiting, 
waiting,

I played my way through honors in school, 
the only place I could
talk
  the classroom,
  or at my piano lessons, Mrs. Hillhouse’s canary always 
  singing the most for my talents,
  as if I had thrown some part of my body away upon entering 
  her house
  and was now searching every ivory case
  of the keyboard, slipping my fingers over black 
  ridges and around smooth rocks,
  wondering where I had lost my bloody organs, 
  or my mouth which sometimes opened
  like a California poppy,
  wide and with contrasts
  beautiful in sweeping fields,
  entirely closed morning and night,

I played my way from age to age,
but they all seemed ageless
or perhaps always
old and lonely,
wanting only one thing, surrounded by the dusty bitter-smelling 
leaves of orange trees,
wanting only to be touched by a man who loved me, 
who would be there every night
to put his large strong hand over my shoulder,
whose hips I would wake up against in the morning, 
whose mustaches might brush a face asleep,
dreaming of pianos that made the sound of Mozart 
and Schubert without demanding
that life suck everything
out of you each day,
without demanding the emptiness
of a timid little life.

I want to thank my mother
for letting me wake her up sometimes at 6 in the morning 
when I practiced my lessons
and for making sure I had a piano
to lay my school books down on, every afternoon.
I haven’t touched the piano in 10 years,
perhaps in fear that what little love I’ve been able to
pick, like lint, out of the corners of pockets,
will get lost,
slide away,
into the terribly empty cavern of me
if I ever open it all the way up again.
Love is a man
with a mustache
gently holding me every night,
always being there when I need to touch him;
he could not know the painfully loud
music from the past that
his loving stops from pounding, banging,
battering through my brain,
which does its best to destroy the precarious gray matter when I 
am alone;
he does not hear Mrs. Hillhouse’s canary singing for me,
liking the sound of my lesson this week,
telling me,
confirming what my teacher says, 
that I have a gift for the piano 
few of her other pupils had.
When I touch the man
I love,
I want to thank my mother for giving me 
piano lessons
all those years,
keeping the memory of Beethoven,
a deaf tortured man,
in mind;
 of the beauty that can come
from even an ugly
past.

© Diane Wakoski