and it feels like a homecoming...it feels like this...
When my nineteen-year-old son turns on the kitchen tap
and leans down over
the sink and tilts his head sideways
to drink directly from the stream of
cool water,
I think of my older brother, now almost ten years gone,
who
used to do the same thing at that age;
and when he lifts his head back up and, satisfied,
wipes the water
dripping from his cheek
with his shirtsleeve, it’s the same casual
gesture
my brother used to make; and I don’t tell him
to use a glass, the
way our father told my brother,
because I like remembering my brother
when he was young, decades before
anything
went wrong, and I like the way my son
becomes a little more my
brother for a moment
through this small habit born of a simple need,
which, natural and unprompted, ties them together
across the bounds of
death, and across time …
as if the clear stream flowed between two
worlds
and entered this one through the kitchen faucet,
my son and brother
drinking the same water.
"A Drink of Water" by Jeffrey Harrison
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