Untitled #10 / Popping To The Shop With My Grandmother
I look left then right
Up the street the way I was told
To as a kid and if I stay here
And look hard enough eventually I’ll see
A problem. I’m looking for the supermarket
Pulling along a blue-veined hand
Freckled with age
And I must remind myself
Not to be harsh with it as I hold it. These hands once carefully
Put my mother down into a cot and
Changed her nappies and drove her to school.
There’s the supermarket. Do you need help crossing the road?
My gran crosses herself.
That currency isn’t taken here, you’ll
Have to exchange it. I stop an older fella
To ask where, and he says
Something racist about the shop on the corner
Where a family has quietly contributed
To their community for
Three generations.
I exchange what I can for change
And look to where
My gran is on the other side of the street.
Neither of us move and the gulf is eternal.
It’s black and only a thin white line
Separates us and my gran crosses herself.
In the name of the father and of the son,
Left then right -
And all I see are problems.