All Poems, Children, Cousins, Family, Sag Harbor, Trips and Places

Reunion’s Over

 

Reunion’s over.

Experiment in group living.

Beyond immediate family.

Different agendas, requirements.

Time frames, maybe values.

Offering cousins, who live apart, a chance to meet.

In the intimate world of play.

A window for grandparents.

To watch children of their children mingle.

Learn names.

Help each other.

Collaborate in the land of pretend.

Where many years ago, adults ruled.

Albeit brief, missing some, it worked.

Perhaps it laid a seed.

Cousins knowing one another,

like eating, is a need.

 

Lynn Benjamin

August 25, 2023

 

 

 

Adult Children, All Poems, Beaches, Disappointment, Family, Grandchildren, Sag Harbor, Trips and Places

16 Dogwood

 

The idea of reunion.

Conceived months ago.

A rental at 16 Dogwood.

In Sag Harbor.

A place to share first with Roseanne and Zev.

Zev, dropping out early.

Called to Portugal.

Then Roseanne’s family.

Stricken with Covid.

Days before the event.

So, the house, three bedrooms, two sofa beds, fell to us.

To Bob and me alone.

A nest too big, too comfortable for two.

Around activities on Madison.

Bustling with two families, six children.

Where all toys resided.

Trips to park and beach emanated.

Sad, our reunion incomplete.

But consoled by stones, shells.

Seaweed, grasses, crabs.

Seagulls, sand, salt.

Calm bay waters.

Quiet morning, evening meanders.

Thinking of those not here.

Though unable to make it to the house,

their voices clear I hear.

 

Lynn Benjamin

August 24, 2023

All Poems, Children, Death, Family, Grandchildren, Sag Harbor, Trips and Places

Oakland Cemetery On the Way to Mashashimuet Park

 

How do people get dead? asked Arthur, three.

As we walked past Oakland Cemetery in Sag Harbor.

On the way to Mashashimuet Park.

Along with his brother and two cousins.

How do people get dead? I repeated the question to his father.

As I pushed Arthur in the stroller.

Well, said his father.

Sometimes they get sick and don’t get better.

Oh, said Arthur, satisfied.

How do cars get dead?

Then, answered his own question.

No one fixes them!

We gave Arthur credit for his answer.

Pushed forward to the park.

Where the cousins climbed, swung, dug, spun.

On the walk home, Ezra, five, insisted on entering the cemetery.

Everyone followed.

Looking at the stone of a man buried over one hundred years ago.

A.J. Tabor, died March 4, 1883 at sixty-three years.

The children marveled that bodies were underground.

Eliana, six, said she wanted to see the grave of her great grandmother.

I explained that her paternal great grandmothers were in Philadelphia.

Her maternal great grandmothers were likely in Russia.

She crossed her arms, stamped her foot.

I want to see them!

So, I promised to take her to see the stones of the closer kin.

Then we rolled on.

Ez and Arthur in strollers.

Katusha and Eliana pushing, mothering, tending.

Back to the house on Madison.

To build block towers before dinner.

Matters of death for children

difficult to comprehend.

Beginning of life easier

than what happens at the end.

It takes many conversations.

Loss experiences, too.

For anyone to truly know

how profound the last adieu.

 

Lynn Benjamin

August 24, 2023

 

All Poems, Beaches, People Traits, Sag Harbor, Trips and Places

Stony Beach

 

It’s very quiet on the stony beach.

Near our rental on Dogwood.

Except for the crunching of shells, rocks beneath my feet.

Wind blowing through tall grasses, Queen Anne’s lace.

Around a marsh.

Shrieking of a lone seagull.

I always thought beaches were expanses of sand.

Till I traveled the world.

Saw muddy ones.

Rocky ones.

Broad ones.

Tiny slips.

All abutting water.

Ocean, inlet, bay, lake, river.

Sometimes places surprise you.

They’re not what you expect.

Sometimes people you think you know

present covert aspect.

What you think you know may differ

from what you really see.

Life is full of illusions,

nuance, complexity.

 

Lynn Benjamin

August 21, 2023

 

 

All Poems, Beaches, For Children, Sag Harbor, Trips and Places

Circle Beach

 

It surprises me I like a stony beach called Circle.

Close to the rental in Sag Harbor.

Between high grasses and bay.

Full of stones, shells, scrub.

I suppose it’s the stillness.

Rejected by bathers who want stretches of soft sand.

Companions, rows of umbrellas.

Here, the lone walker.

Often accompanied by several dogs.

Cooling off in the water.

One morning, a guitarist on a blanket.

Singing his heart out.

But, mostly calm.

Blueness and stones crunching under foot.

The scent of salt

to open up the nose.

The right amount of quiet

to let my hand compose.

 

Lynn Benjamin

August 24, 2023

 

All Poems, Beaches, For Children, Sag Harbor, Trips and Places

Wiborg Beach

 

It’s a job to pack for the beach.

Six children, six adults.

Towels, toys, chairs.

Boxes of pizza for dinner.

A metal tub to make a bonfire.

To roast marshmallows.

By 5 pm, day time sunbathers go home.

Making room for an evening crowd.

Caravans of jeeps with tables for banquets.

Balls, bats, frisbees.

Blankets, jackets to protect against the wind.

As the sun descends, a city rises.

Even seagulls change guard.

A night time crowd by the sea.

Their music, pounding surf.

Their carpet, sand.

Like the tides, they’ll be out by morning.

Beach, pristine, once more.

Ready for day trippers

to nestle by the shore.

 

Lynn Benjamin

August 23, 2023

 

     

All Poems, Children, Family, For Children, Grandchildren, Pleasure, Sag Harbor, Trips and Places

Sweetness

 

What is sweetness to you?

The taste of sugar or honey?

The smell of a rose?

The sound of a lone flute?

The touch of a baby’s skin?

The sight of a mother bird tending its chick?

When there’s time to pause, sweetness seeps in.

Touches you.

Sometimes holds you in its hand.

Makes magic.

Cousins, who rarely see each other, playing.

As though there were no interruption.

With some primal understanding of kinship.

Caring, sharing, mentoring.

Indulging playful whims.

A three-year-old firefighter, delivery man.

Sharing food at table.

Fishing for fallen tidbits from highchairs.

Picking up pens to write.

What could possibly be sweeter?

Than watching cousins get along?

A melody in motion.

Inimitable sweet song.

 

Lynn Benjamin

August 21, 2023

Below are two poems written by Katerina (9) and Eliana (6) on our first night of the reunion. Photos also appear.

Children are:

Katerina (9), Eliana (6), Maia (18 mo), Ezra (5), Arthur (3), Solomon (12 mo). Roseanne and her family could not come due to illness. Zev is in Portugal.

 

*******************

Bunnies

Yaya and I see two bunnies in my backyard.

Leaping, playing, eating.

In the background, cicadas drumming.

Crickets chirping.

Wind whooshing.

Light fading.

Night clouds gathering.

Blankets in the sky.

Two bunnies resting.

Their night light, a firefly.

 

Katerina Benjamin (9 years)

August 20, 2023

 

*****************************

Deer

Deer have horns.

They fight other deer.

Different kinds.

Males and females.

They eat plants, grass.

They hunt at night.

They visit my backyard.

From the forest.

At night, they hear crickets.

 

Eliana Benjamin (6 years)

August 20, 2023

 

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All Poems, Children, For Children, Sag Harbor, Trips and Places

Hairbrush

 

I looked everywhere, said Katusha. I can’t find a hairbrush.

After shampooing, conditioning her long hair.

Putting on pajamas.

Cleaning teeth.

On the cusp of jumping into bed.

I have a folding comb-brush combination, I offered.

Ask Grandpop to go to the car, get my vest, and my water carrier.

So, she skipped downstairs.

Made the request.

Bounced back up.

Wearing vest and water carrier.

Took out the brush-comb combo.

Smoothed out knots from her head.

Her sister popped up, watching

from inside the other bed.

Both exclaimed delight

in the flimsy compact device.

So, we rushed to Amazon.

Ordered three for a great price.

With portable hair grooming set,

they can travel with great ease.

Wash and dry and braid their locks

in any style they please.

 

Lynn Benjamin

August 20, 2023