Blessing the Baby
When my upstairs neighbor invites me to her baby shower,
I feel guilty about forgetting to bring in my recycling bins,
again. I am a bad neighbor, but she’s going to be a mother
so she’ll have to practice forgiveness on someone first. Usually,
I’m a people pleaser. I am a people. I was born
with all the people I could ever create, inside me. I try
to forgive them—their dirty handprints on my skirt, the towels
left on the bathroom floor. We blessed the baby
while we tied around our wrists one long, red string.
For a moment, the string connected us—wives, mothers,
and me, neither—until it didn’t, until the scissors severed
us, made a bracelet of the blood string. I told the baby,
I give you this wrist. The world will break all your blessings
if it wants, and believe me, baby, most of the time, it wants.
Copyright © 2024 by Diannely Antigua. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on March 1, 2024, by the Academy of American Poets.
“When my neighbor invited me to her baby shower, I expected an afternoon of ‘Baby Shower Bingo,’ ‘Guess the Candy Bar in the Diaper,’ or the endless chorus of adoration when she unwrapped onesie after onesie. I dreaded the performance of it all. But this one was different. It was the best baby shower I’d ever been to—truly a sentence I never imagined I’d say. The blessing ceremony felt witchy and wonderful. Almost two years later, I hope my blessing has reached the baby; that even in this cruel world there is hope, even if that hope is as small as the red string bracelet I refused to take off for months.”
—Diannely Antigua