Memory

by Rebecca Loggia

 


Your mind drifts back to the time when
things were simpler. Memories of snow

falling from a star-flecked sky. The puff
of breath that echoed from your father’s

lips as he pointed to Jupiter and taught
that miracles were never too far off.

Somewhere along the way, you forgot this
teaching. Wonder if this weight was something

that came with age or if you picked it up
somewhere along the way. You remember

your sister, caring for you like a mother.
Your mother, the size of her hands—so

much like yours—as they carried entire planets,
weaving together solar systems between her

fingers as she whispered everything you could be.
At night, you stare up at a star-flecked sky,

wonder if any of it will ever come true.

 
Short Stories Magazine
Return to Volume 4

 
Rebecca Loggia writes fiction and poetry in order to find the balance between the worlds of normalcy and disability. Her poem “Infirmary” placed third in Phoenix Sister Cities 2017 Writers with Disabilities Competition and her poem “Still” is forthcoming in Allegory Ridge. She lives in Arizona with her dog, Natasha.