COUNTING CIGARETTES
Every time father bathed me, my head was under water.
After blowing bubbles, he taught me the dead man’s float
in an old claw-footed bathtub, just like his father had taught him.
He showed me how his father kicked and held his breath, training
me to glide like a fish. Clinging to his father’s hairy back,
they paddled across the sapphirine-blue waters of the Danube.
Built like a bull, his father breast-stroked like a Carpathian
Mountain bear chasing Beluga sturgeon.
He dunked my head to see how long I could hold my breath,
a Lucky Strike dangling from his lips as he counted cigarettes,
a measure of my time under water that he meticulously recorded
like the way he kept track of money making bets on puts and calls.
My lung capacity kept increasing like a Polynesian pearl diver.
When I later played the trumpet with a much expanded chest,
band-mates called me “Chesty,” claiming I could hold high C
as long as Ima Sumac and had a sweeter tone than Harry James’
rendition of Chiri, Chiri Bim or Ziggy Ellman’s
And The Angels Sing.
Every summer we swam across Zach’s Bay submerged,
like a mini-school of porpoises. Father claimed sun and salt water
healed the silvery-white scales of his psoriasis. He wanted me
to become an Olympic long distance swimmer, but settled for my
qualifying as a life guard at Jones Beach. I reveled in the admiration
of bikini bathing beauties when I plunged into the water slicing
through the surf, swifter than an arrow from the Tartar’s bow to save
a swimmer in distress who would flail about in the clutches of lethal
rip-tide currents.
Father always said I could be an aquatic tzaddik, preferring saving lives
to saving money, I wonder if up in Yenemvelt he’s still counting red
and green up and down ticks on the ticker tape machine. In a quest
for equanimity I no longer hold my breath; I practice mindful
breathing—in and out, in and out, monitoring the turning point,
hoping to earn father’s continued praise even though he may
no longer be counting cigarettes.
Milton P. Ehrlich