MY PATHFINDER
Big brother always led the way,
I was his sidekick and shadow.
After he trundled off to school he told me
of the fun he had cuddling guinea pigs,
singing songs, and listening to stories
while having milk and cookies.
Mostly he was good to me except when
he’d try to smother me with a pillow,
heave me out of his room, or keep me
waiting in the hardware store until
I crapped my pants while he scrutinized
bolts and nuts, hammers, and drills.
A leader in the Boy Scouts, he guided me
from Star to Life to Eagle Scout, making sure
I could tie a bowline, half-hitch and square knot,
build a lean-to and Dutch Oven in the woods,
spot poison ivy, oak and sumac, snare and skin
a rabbit or raccoon and locate three stars in
Orion’s belt under the splendor of a starry night sky.
Watching him grow up I learned to watch for
pubic hair, how to shave, tie a tie and smoke a pipe.
He deciphered the labryrinth of a subway map
so I could escort my prom night date to the Copa,-
reminding me to “Be Prepared,” counseling: “girls are
astonishingly sensitive when you touch them down there.”
He taught me how to drive stick-shift, replace points
and condenser, even how to roll the car down hill
when it wouldn’t start and let compression do its part.
He even helped me put out a fire when I poured
gas in the carburetor when our old Dodge wouldn’t
turn over.
Now I have a nightly dream where he’s all dressed up
in suit and tie with cheeks artificially rouged.
He walks ahead of me across the street beaconing me
to follow him.
My pounding heart awakens me as I realize
I’m not ready to follow him just yet.
Milton P. Ehrlich 199 Christie St. Leonia, N.J. 07605