For his 60th birthday, I gave my husband some air conditioning. That is, I spoke to the repairman and paid him, and learned about the leak, the new kind of (safer) "freon" in the pink canister, the kind that is less harmful to the ozone layer than the old Freon-12, and that fits our new energy-saving unit, and so on. I also baked him that lemon & chocolate cake and cupcakes, right before the heat wave, the one we are having now, with the "feels like 110" temps.
This is the one week a year we will use the AC, so I had to get it going!
He gave himself a new doorknob, having removed the existing one on the door between kitchen and garage, leaving a fine round hole, which actually worked better than the previous doorknob. This was a longstanding problem with cheap door & mickey mouse doorknob, exacerbated each summer by heat and humidity.
Now it is fixed until the poor fit of the cheap door causes the next set of problems and/or until the fabulous husband finds the perfect new door at Menards.
Meanwhile, my daughter continues her volleyball conditioning--summer weight lifting, running, etc.--after last night's league game in a hot warehouse. She's grown up so much since being afraid of everything except the air, the wild claim I made in this poem, first published in Drought, an online magazine that no longer exists.
Oddly enough, I wrote it before our house fire, and she did know where to meet, the big pine tree in front of the house, near the sidewalk.
The Air
My daughter is afraid
of everything
except the air.
At night she cannot sleep
unless she clutches
my fingers through the bars
of her bed. When the siren
wails its warning
we go down
to the basement, bring
blankets and zebra
or the red velveteen bear.
In kindergarten
she learns to crawl along the floor
and reach up
to feel if the doorknob is hot.
She knows where
we will meet
when the house burns down,
when there is nothing left
but the air.
My daughter is afraid
of everything
except the air.
At night she cannot sleep
unless she clutches
my fingers through the bars
of her bed. When the siren
wails its warning
we go down
to the basement, bring
blankets and zebra
or the red velveteen bear.
In kindergarten
she learns to crawl along the floor
and reach up
to feel if the doorknob is hot.
She knows where
we will meet
when the house burns down,
when there is nothing left
but the air.
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