Worth it.

I don’t have a lot of scars. There’s one on my right wrist and another on the thumb on my left hand. I don’t recall how I got them, but I’m sure I was very traumatized at the time. They’ve been part of me for a long time, though, and I’ve grown fond of them.

My biggest scar is on my stomach. It’s several inches across. Sometimes it itches, and sometimes it burns. It’s not pretty. But I like it anyway. It’s my favorite scar.

Without it, I wouldn’t have my girl.

Check out Owlhaven for more scar stories.

"Clean"

Here’s a punch in the gut for you. Mr. Kooser has more eloquent things to say, of course. He is a poet, after all.

American Life in Poetry: Column 082

By Ted Kooser,
U.S. poet laureate, 2004-2006

Many poems celebrate the joys of having children. Michigan poetJeff Vande Zande reminds us that adults make mistakes, even with children they love, and that
parenting is about fear as well as joy.

Clean

Her small body shines
with water and light.
Giggling, she squeals “daddy,”
splashes until his pants darken.
Five more minutes, he thinks,
stepping out quickly,
pouring himself a drink,
not expecting to return
to find her slipped under,
her tiny face staring up
through the undulating surface.
Before he can move,
or drop his scotch,
she raises her dripping head,
her mouth a perfect O.
The sound of her gulped breath
takes the wind out of him.
Her face,
pale and awed,
understands the other side
of water and air.
His wife didn’t see,
doesn’t know.
Her feet pulse and fade
in the upstairs joists.
His daughter cries,
slips from him, not giggling.
She wants out.
He tries to keep her
in the tub, in the light.
He’s on his knees.

Reprinted from “Rattle,” Winter, 2005, by permission of the poet, whose most recent book is “Into the Desperate Country,” March Street Press, 2006. This weekly column is supported by The Poetry Foundation, The Library of Congress, and the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. This column does not accept unsolicited poetry.