To the people of Japan,

especially

the people who work tirelessly

to keep us safe, warm, and fed

MARCH 9, 2011

not much time

between good morning and good-bye

out the door

early

Father goes one way

to catch a train east to Shinjuku

then later

I go another way

to walk to school

when all’s clear

Mother goes to the table

to work at her laptop

out into March wind

I rush to meet Yuka

my best friend since kindergarten

Maya! she shouts to me

we run, grab hands

lean in, squint, and

smile into each other’s faces

we are sweaterless

kaze no ko

“wind kids”

who don’t wear coats

even in winter

with no time to spare

to be on time

we hurry on

at recess

a time

when we choose

how we use

our time,

Yuka and I run out

to meet

under the cherry tree near the gym

long time no see, I say

she giggles

Ready?

Yuka stands behind me

waiting

waiting

waiting

for

the wind to knock me back

into her outstretched arms

it takes big gusts and trust

to fall back

it’s not easy

for me to let go

there’s hesitation

then panic

the moment my toes are off the ground

then relief—

Yuka’s always there

to catch me

today’s wind is not a true March wind

but

we wait

let go and

fall

as many times as we can

until the playground clock says

our time is up

back inside

my class lines up

carrying our chairs

to the music room

we’re out of step

starting and stopping

bumping and scooting

straggling

before lunch each day

these last days of fifth grade

we practice

for the spring choir performance

at the city concert hall

on Monday

March 14

five days from now

parents (mostly mothers) and grandparents

will come

at their appointed time

make their way through the lobby then

rush to seats

as each grade files onstage

takes their places

sings and exits

Teacher chose me

to be front row center

to clank blocks

to keep the beat

with her piano chords

I love this task

but

it’s not easy

each day

we get lost

in bird notes

a thrush

high in mulberry branches

outside the music room

begins his song when we begin ours

he is trying to cheer us up—

our song sounds so sad

humans are fragile, we sing

Teacher assures us

the song will make hearts ring

it does end on a higher note

but it is no one’s favorite

except

maybe grandparents’

we struggle on

with my clank clank

trying to get them in tune

life is mysterious, we sing

walls

windows

tree limbs shudder

the thrush disappears in flutters

Teacher stands up

11:45

earthquake

we don’t miss a beat

grabbing our padded emergency hoods

from the backs of our chairs

putting them

on our heads

in case something falls

we have earthquakes all the time

but this time

Earth rocks us

in circles

someone says, this is eerie

Earth stills

we settle back into our classroom

where

there are desks to slide under

if it happens again

it doesn’t

early afternoon

in the gym

all fifth-grade classes

come together

to practice

Moriyama’s big hit, “Sakura”

a spring song for cherry blossom season

we will perform at the sixth graders’ graduation ceremony

after they present us with rice seeds from their school project

they will stand from their chairs

to face us

as we sing

I know we will see them smile

we are in harmony

from the first note

the thrush does not take a seat

in the cherry tree outside the gym

shoulder to shoulder

within the group

I lift my eyes to the windows

singing the chorus

Sakura! Sakura!

as these cherry blossoms bloom…

I see

sparrows flit and twitter

twig to twig

through cherry blossom buds

not ready to bloom

after school

I wait for Yuka

not in a rush

on Wednesdays

we walk and chat

pass shops and stop

to count

pigeons sitting

in a bare tree,

bulbuls shredding

magnolias, and

city workers pruning

branches

the trees are full today, I say

Yuka giggles

I giggle back

we count

twelve pigeons

three bulbuls

five city workers

then cut along the path

of Great-grandfather’s field

past the last cabbage

daikon and

broccoli

he’s pushing a motor tiller

guiding it

making a new row of crops

a starling follows him

picking out insects

I call to him

Yuka echoes me

then says,

he cannot hear us

he doesn’t hear well anyway

and

he never says much either

even back when

I followed behind him

helping him

picking out weeds

and

planting bowls of seeds

buckets of taro tubers, and

trays of edamame seedlings

before I got too busy

with school

cram school and

English practice

Great-grandfather has farmed full-time since age seventeen

for sixty-three years

each year I think will be his last

his customers pass his vegetable stand

with bicycle baskets packed

with vegetables, toilet paper, and detergent

“one-stop shopping” at the new store

kills his business

but still

he tills, sows, and gathers

each season

there is always something

to do

he plants less, but

we always have plenty to eat

Grandmother pickles the excess

the starling pecks the softened soil

a wagtail zigs and zags and wags

Great-grandfather’s fields feed them, too

Yuka asks, same birds from yesterday?

I don’t know

same from last year?

I don’t know how long they live

I only know their names and

their songs

mainly

I just love them

how they appear out of nowhere

like an unexpected gift

how they come and go

fly in and out

as they please

as they need

over a garden wall

we hear but do not see

a bush warbler

at the park

two doves

blink at us from their fence seat

and greet us with coo

we stop to inspect the cherry tree

one branch hangs down and reaches out to us

the blossom-viewing prediction for Tokyo is right, we agree,

no way

this tree will bloom before a new school year begins April 6

no way

we will picnic under full blossoms the last days of our break, but

no matter

tight buds

Yuka and I

enjoy now together

we take our time

before

we have to start our evening schedules

today

for her, abacus lessons

for me, English practice

see you!

we say to the doves

and to each other

and turn

Yuka

left

I

right

Grandmother is bringing in laundry

at the house Great-grandfather built

I stop at our gates sitting side by side

the daffodils Mother planted

the fall Grandfather died

wait to open

a breeze through their house

reaches me

paper, straw, wood

cold and dark

the house smells sunny

like vegetables

freshly cut or drying

Grandmother always takes a break

from the vegetable stand

to bring in their laundry

to greet me when I return and

to help me while Mother works

at our house

doors slam

the wind, says Grandmother and smiles

I yell, I’m home, toward our

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