Analysis of Mother



Mother
You were there when I began
Both as a child and as a man
Holding out an outstretched hand as you
Walked the walk before me.

You taught me to have faith in Christ
And because of our relationship I comprehend
Another sliver of the piece of the Father’s mind–
How he holds the capacity to love his sons
Unconditionally
No matter what they think or say or do.

You laid out your tools more than a thousand times
Upon the dusty, dingy floor and poured out
Your sweat and your time and your toil
To show me what real love is by
Your actions.

That outstretched hand is layered with cracks
Like the maze of lines in the cracked porcelain
Tile of the tub you took out on that last job.
Your fingers, each finger, is bent, broken, burnt, or bruised
As that hand still reaches out for me
Sort of               lifelessly
            hanging
But still sticking out anyway.

You trudge upon that path you know
On your hands and knees so that your knees
Are worn down like the stumps of trees
And gnarled and knobby, full of bumps and uneven.
And I can see the rings of your time spent
Wrapped around you,
Never wasting a single oval,
Never wearing a wrinkle
You did not make the best of.

When I fell and cut myself or bruised my skin
You picked me up in those sacrificial hands
To wrap them around my waist and hug me.
You cleaned out the dirt and bandaged my
Wounds
And took them up, carrying them
As if they were your own.

When mother pulled upon my arm and almost ripped it off my shoulder
When mother got me so sick that the doctors laid my limp body
Upon a cold, metal table and
Shot up my little legs with penicillin as I screamed in pain
When mother mocked me and let others ridicule me until I cried
When mother drove me around town half-smockered at 1 am
When I looked for her and could not find her
When I looked for her for at least two days and
Found her in the bed of another man and woman
When mother did not tuck me in, and I looked out thru the window at all the stars
Wondering
If you could see them from your porch
When she took the phone and locked it in her room so I couldn’t call you
When she smiled snarkishly expecting to be worshipped on Mother’s Day for
Giving birth to me then shoving me forward into a hellish existence
When mother ripped my entire world out from under me as if
The entire life I knew were all one big joke she played on me…
You were there
Going through it all with me, your big hand clasped around my little, my growing fingers.
You lifted me up and showed me a better way to live,
When my mother abandoned me and gave up her “right” to watching me grow,
You earnestly and vigorously put on her pristine shoes squeezing
Your toes into the ends of the heels, wearing them on top of your
Ratty, mud-stained sneakers, making them fit as best you could
Then going off to labor yet another day.
                      


Scheme ABBCD XXXEDC XXFGE XHXXDFIJ KLLHXCMMX XXDGXXX ADNXXXANHXIXCOXXDXXXKIOXJ
Poetic Form
Metre 10 1011101 11010101 101101111 101011 11111101 001110010101 0101010110101 111001001111 01000 1101111111 11111110101 01010101011 11011011 11111111 110 101111011 10111001100 11011111111 1101101110111 111110111 111 10 1110110 11011111 111011111 11110111 010101110010 0111011111 1011 101001010 1010010 1111011 1110111111 1111010101 1110111011 111010101 1 01111001 111011 1101011101111110 1101111101011110 010110100 111101101011101 1101101101010111 110110111111 1111001110 11110111110 1000110101010 11011110011110101101 100 11111111 1110101100111111 1111010111011011 1011111011001010010 1101101011110111 0010111011111111 101 101111111110111011010 11011011010111 111001010110111011 11000100011010110 1101011011011111 10111010111111 110111010101
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 2,882
Words 579
Sentences 12
Stanzas 7
Stanza Lengths 5, 6, 5, 8, 9, 7, 25
Lines Amount 65
Letters per line (avg) 34
Words per line (avg) 9
Letters per stanza (avg) 317
Words per stanza (avg) 80

About this poem

When I was a kid, I was abused very badly by my mom. I had always dreamed of living with my dad, and when I was sixteen, I made that dream a reality by making one of the hardest decisions I've ever had to make and left her behind. This is the poem I wrote years later about my complicated childhood that I used to never read to anyone else except for my dad because of how personal it was, but I think that also makes it one of the best poems I've ever written because it does not hold back at all. The poem is about duality, as much of my work is. It's about good and evil, about two radically different mothers at war with each other. The word "Mother," its meaning and connotation can be something unique to every person based upon their own experiences, whether good or bad, and this poem represents the feeling and images of what "Mother" was and was not to me. 

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Written on March 23, 2018

Submitted by emergentauthor on November 25, 2023

2:53 min read
54

Zachary Huneycutt

My name is Zachary Huneycutt, and I have been writing since I was six years old and used to dictate stories to my grandma to write down. I wrote a book when I was 13 years old over the summer that I am currently attempting to turn into a fantasy book trilogy today. Currently, I am a fiction writer for Warp 10 Magazine, an online science fiction magazine, and have 8 pieces of writing published in it. I also enjoy performing my poetry on a weekly YouTube poetry podcast called Rattlecast put on by Rattle Magazine out of California. more…

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