Off Season

by T.H. Youngblood

Their childhood is acorn pancakes
and the rusted crust of battery acid
around neglected lanterns,
sugar maple crowns on
summer-shaved heads,
goldenrod and neighbor kids
stealing each other’s hex keys
and air pumps.
A life of Saturdays and online
freelance for pay.
There are two hundred fifty-four songs
on the playlist to get us down
to Florida to stay
with my mom for a while.
We will pause at a seventy-nine
dollar a night hotel
with a pool and free breakfast. I will lie
and say there are only
two of us but ask
for extra blankets. Mrs. Frisby
and the Rats of NIMH
, and nobody
complains, not even
the almost-teenager.
Rest stop dandelion puff wish
for gummy worms. (I
say no). Their shoes are made
for rivers—thick soles
and navy nylon straps, all the same
in three sizes. I didn’t tell anybody
we ran out of money last winter.
A lunar eclipse and a gray fox in the woods
behind the house.
We had wool socks and seasoned cedar
and sometimes hot chocolate.
The dog is a good traveler, and
only forty pounds. We take turns
walking her. Cheap gas
and a five-pound bag of pecans
in Georgia. We pass a Waffle House
and they ask me again
about people no longer around.
I answer what I can.
Sabal palms and billboards of assault rifles—
home, the Sunshine State.


T.H. YOUNGBLOOD is an American poet and educator who believes that poems increase the capacity of readers’ hearts, so she writes like it matters. She hails from the scrublands and sinkholes of Central Florida, and has lived a good while now in the Arkansas Ozarks. Her work has been recently featured in Taproot Magazine.