
Dollar store stockings,
ten cent candy canes,
a six-and-a-half foot tall fake tree
that we got for free
from St. Vincent de Paul.
Nearly everything we own
is from a bargain basement
or has been handed down.
Our candle sticks,
Christmas lights,
stuffed elves.
Even the wood in the fireplace
was given to us.
I don’t mind sniffing out deals
or falling ass backwards into them,
and I don’t mind anything that’s been used,
but one day it would be nice
to provide
new, shiny things,
stuff
that one day I can hand down
to my daughter,
to my son.
Things that they can hold.
Tangibles that they cannot take with them
when they go,
but are good,
long-lasting belongings
that mean more than words
and are easier to understand and keep
than everything
that builds and rises
and pushes letters to letters
to letters
and leaves me feeling
that I have done much
but not enough.
I’m doing the best I can
with what I have,
but when you know
that you are not the strongest,
the smartest,
the kindest,
or the most giving,
and that you are only getting by
on luck from hard work and love,
it often leaves you wondering
late night after late night,
beyond wine and desire,
beyond comfort and stability,
beyond your wife
your kids,
your home,
if you ought to be making,
fixing,
taking,
saving
more.
And even on the best days like this one,
a few days after Christmas,
you can feel pretty goddamned low
because even if you were providing
great, shiny things—a better place—
and even if you were a writer good enough
to make things last,
none of it would be enough
to make you feel deserving of anything
except what you already have,
which isn’t much,
but Everything.
A house of bargains and hand-me-downs,
and a wife and two kids
that you want to leave
the world to.
~ K.J.