Tuesday, June 03, 2025

Tuesday poem #635 : Marc Perez : PARENTING IN DARK TIMES

 

“In the dark times
Will there also be singing?
Yes, there will also be singing.
About the dark times”

—Bertolt Brecht 

 

You stand on a stool, holding
a pink microphone with both hands,
and belch songs in three languages.
Behind you, a 55-inch television
mumbles natural disasters. I lower
the volume. The newscaster is about to
say something I don’t agree with. Are you
proud? You ask. Of course, I reply, requesting
a song about sunshine. You are light
in dark times. 

Last night, I caught myself saying,
and then, he killed himself. I wonder
who died. You see, I keep thinking
about unbecoming. I lie in bed,
walk the streets, cook and eat meals,
shower, water plants, and all the while
imagine dissipating. I’m sick,
afraid to say. In the afterlife,
where I hope to still hear your voice,
will there also be singing? 

I doubt it. I shake my head and claw
my toes on the floor to rid of death
from my mind, focus on your words.
The newscaster is now talking about a war
she refuses to call genocide, inflation,
celebrity gossip. To be alive is to witness
your joys. Here, we fold paper cranes, dance,
watch cartoons on repeat, read books. Here,
I can walk you to kindergarten, where,
yes, there will also be singing. 

The microphone runs out
of battery
. You place it at your feet
and continue to sing acapella. Outside,
the heavy clouds begin to part. Within
me, something also clears up,
subsides. I open the window, let your
voice drift through the blinds and stir
the cold, empty street. I turn off the screen
as the newscaster ends her report
about the dark times.

 

 

 

 

Marc Perez is the author of Dayo (Brick Books, 2024) and the chapbook, Domus (Anstruther Press, 2025). He parents two curious children and enjoys wandering around the city with his camera.

the Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan

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