DOING NOTHING
When Jewish blood
flowed down from the mountain,
Father said it was time to move.
We left.
When my mind gets quiet
and I try to do nothing,
my body sings a lullaby
I haven’t heard since Mother
sang to me many years ago.
I breathe naked air
and watch tree branches
in a flurry of wind
converse with each other
in a neighborly way.
Clouds come and go,
playing musical chairs.
It’s a moving panorama
like the Futurama
at the ’39 Worlds Fair.
Only my balaboosta
Grandmother in Bucharest
excelled at doing nothing,
Her elbows leaned
on a windowsill
day in and day out.
Her forearms sagged
from eating mounds
of herring and potatoes.
In repose, she chewed
on pumpernickel,
with crab-apple jelly,
while she monitored
parades of passersby
on cobblestone streets.