Wrist

I watch the first time he opens the door on his own.
I watch the first time he opens the door easy.

I’ve been waiting for Elvis to go fuzzy,
it’s fall, there’s low sunlight,
and they need to look him up, spell p-r-e-s-l-e-y,
but there are mean, mean drums on the stereo—
a shook growl and a jagged curve from one to four.

While I wait, I question the force in my shoulders.

There is my father’s speech and my own,
and there are the places we meet, maybe,
the rhythm of a small man running,
the shook up growl of a teacher explaining
to the hallway and the sidewalk and dusk.

I guess again about the mechanics of throwing—
socket, pivot, ball.

I press my tongue into my gums,
push pain into the bone by the porcelain.
The table is clean. The lights are clean.

And I draw toward the perfect curve, then again,
back to the tension between practice and habit,
leaning over gravity as a private dare,
working dull pencils and turning worn gears,
lifting a child with one arm, easy,
but something’s gone wrong with my wrist.

Fred Johnson

Fred Johnson

Fred Johnson teaches literature and film courses at Whitworth University in Spokane. He always thinks there's going to be something amazing in abandoned places and among discarded things, and sometime