Happy Birthday Colin

My son, Colin, turns ten years old today. I wasn’t planning to write about his birthday, but the significance of the occasion struck me as I warmed my coffee in the microwave this morning.

And right or wrong, every thought and emotion about Colin is filtered through the lens of his autism. He was diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder in 2018. I wrote about that experience in this essay.

I realize how lucky I am to be Colin’s dad, especially since I was so late to the game of marriage and family. His presence reframes my existence. My job, my creative ambitions, and everything else in my life are secondary to being a good husband to my wife, Pam, and a good father to Colin.

Before rushing off to work, I wanted to share some previously published poems about parenthood and Colin, along with some photos of him.

Colin Joseph DiClemente at the pediatrician’s office.

Entrance

As blood, urine and feces stain the hospital sheets,
a nurse tells a mother-to-be,
“Honey, don’t be embarrassed.
What happens in the delivery room,
stays in the delivery room.”

The mother-to-be moans and sheds tears
as the epidural wears off and the labor reaches its climax
with a medieval torture method known as “Tug of War”—
sheets wrapped around ankles, legs hoisted in the air
and pulled apart as the mother-to-be screams
and squeezes her muscles and makes the final push until …
a tiny male human, slimy and alien-looking,
pops out of the womb with a full head of downy, brown hair
and soft, pliable ears like a Teddy bear.

The mother blurts out three words:
“Baby, baby, baby.”
The doctor transfers the squirming newborn to her breast,
and the two bond with skin-to-skin contact.
Love and happiness flow.
The task is completed, the effort done.
The child has safely entered the world.
But the real hard work has just begun.

Colin Joseph DiClemente. Age 2 years, 8 months.

The Great Equalizer

The democratic nature of parenthood.
It doesn’t matter who you are—
man, woman or trans, gay or straight,
Black, white or any other shade,
tall or short, skinny or fat, rich or poor—
when your toddler is wailing
in a grocery store or shopping mall,
when the feet are stomping, the arms swinging,
the cheeks reddened and the tears rolling—
all you want to do is pick up the child
and make the crying stop.

Wealth, social standing and comely looks
mean nothing to kids; they’re not impressed
by your credentials and you can’t negotiate
with these little angels and tyrants who rule the world.
Two clichés apply here:
parenting wipes the slate clean
and levels the playing field.

All mothers and fathers desire the same thing—
the health, safety and
development of their offspring.
The goals are simple amid the frenzy
of a life marked by stress and lack of sleep.
They are: eat the chicken nuggets, drink the apple juice,
recite the alphabet, put away the toys, finish the milk,
wave bye-bye and go down easy at nap time.

Pam and Colin outside NBT Bank Stadium.

Human Anatomy

Beneath the ribs
beats the heart
of a child,
waiting for its mother,
longing to be fed—
not just with milk and food,
but also with love.

Colin playing in the feeding therapy room.

Nap Time

Late afternoon, Sunday, gray light
seeping in through parted curtains.

Mother and baby sleeping on the couch,
hair tousled, right cheek against left breast,
elbows curved at equal angles.

I am awake, drinking coffee,
watching their chests rise and fall,
and trying not to make any noise.

My whole life revealed in the space
of three sofa cushions occupied by
two human beings who need me.

Soon the boy will stir;
soon he will squirm and cry, scatter his toys
and race around the cluttered living room.
Soon we will fix dinner
and wash dishes and take out the garbage.

But now time is suspended like a Rod Serling
freeze frame in a Twilight Zone episode—
a halting of activity, a pause in my Sunday
leading to reflection and gratitude for my blessings.

Warmth, safety and responsibility
are the words that pop into my head
while I observe mother and child stretched out together.
I don’t think about what I lack
or what I hope to attain and achieve.
In this moment, I have everything I need.

Pam and Colin.

Exam Room Revelation

“Autism Spectrum Disorder.”
The moment those words
escape the doctor’s lips,
our son’s future
appears bleaker.
The phrases
“special needs,
delayed communication
and lack of
social interaction” follow.

Sorrow for my son Colin
gushes inside me.
I feel sadness
for the challenges
he will endure,
and for his inability
to have a normal life.

In this case,
love proves impotent.
You can’t intercede
with your heart.
And compassion won’t fix
the little boy
sleeping in his bed
as I type out
this bad poem
while lamenting
the diagnosis.

But love for him
does not decrease.
Instead, it grows stronger.
I am grateful
for the blessing
of the boy he is …
and the man
I hope
he will become—
regardless of autism.

Bedtime

Eventually, I’ll fall asleep,
but until then my kid
keeps annoying me,

flicking on the bedroom light
and screaming incoherent phrases—
bits of songs that make
some sense inside his mind.

Telling him “shh” does no good,
and I can’t decipher the words he speaks,
but I do enjoy hearing the sounds they make
when they escape his mouth,
as I close my eyes and try to get some sleep.

Crying at Bedtime

Nothing prepares a parent
for the tantrums of an autistic child.
There’s no well of patience to draw from.
You adapt. You divert. You distract.
You do whatever it takes to calm the child down—
until you earn that blessed moment of peace,
when his eyelids drop and he drifts off to sleep,
his small body folded in the cradle of your arms.

Colin drew with a Sharpie on the living room floor.

Autism Sleeps

My son sleeps,
curled under a blanket
on the couch.

His outbursts have ceased.
His cries and screams quieted.
His stimming stopped.

It’s like his autism
is in remission.
In sleep, he becomes
like any other child.

Observation After Eating Out

Pity for my son swells.
Yet I feel helpless,
Unable to intervene
To make his autism
Go away.

Our patience dwindles
As his outbursts intensify.
But love does not wane.
Instead, it grows stronger.

I have only one son.
Yes, he is different.
He is noisy and
Requires constant attention.
But I am thankful for
His presence in my life.
And who needs the quiet anyway?

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Quintessential Poetry Spotlight

I wanted to share that poet Michael Anthony Ingram has highlighted me for his Quintessential Poetry Spotlight. The post includes a PDF with some sample poems.

 

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Some Poems for Valentine’s Day

Here are some poems for Valentine’s Day. They were culled from previous collections and were written when I was still single and living in Phoenix, Arizona. I added some photos I took during that time period (1998-2006).

Heart Sunlight. Photo by Francis DiClemente.

Solo V-Day

There is no love without another,
no romance when no companion is present.
The self cannot survive on its own.
Affection needs an outlet,
a target to these romantic thoughts.
And happiness demands reciprocation,
because desire withers when forced to remain inside,
and love has no point when Cupid’s bow fails to strike.

Morning on Fairmount Avenue. Photo by Francis DiClemente.

An Involuntary Condition

Here’s to all those whose
birthday wishes never came true—
for the unloved, unlucky and desperate,
for the manic and passive,
for the childless Demeter searching
in vain for her unborn Persephone,
for the clones of Sisyphus rolling
the stones of their loneliness,
groaning under the weight,
straining in the face of repeated defeat.
For the wedding days when
you will not stand upon the altar,
for the groves of family trees
shriveled and lacking offspring.
For all the men and women
who hate being single
and rebel against it every day,
but can do nothing to prevent
becoming orphans in their adulthood.

Slanting Desert Tree. Photo by Francis DiClemente.

Nightingale

I have worshipped at the
altar of loneliness for far too long.
I need a love intervention—
a woman, an angel, a friend,
a nightingale to swoop in on my life
and replace the discordant, recurring song.

Late Afternoon Light. Photo by Francis DiClemente.

Roommates

My pursuit of a union has ended,
And the desire to keep looking is gone,
Dissolved like Kool-Aid
Crystals in cold water.
I no longer fear the inevitable,
Because it already resides here.
I accept the reality of my adult life:
Loneliness is my only mate,
A discarnate presence
Occupying my twin bed at night.

Overnight Stay

The unattached go unnoticed
in hotel bars and lobbies,
watching couples and
overhearing conversations.
They retreat to their rooms
and fall asleep to the
sound of cable television,
turning up the volume
before drifting off
in order to shut out
the animal noises of
the man and woman
enjoying themselves
in the adjacent room—
while being reminded again
that others are not
spending the night alone.

Sunlight on Chair. Photo by Francis DiClemente.

Saturday Night at the Cinema

Couples hurry down the aisle
of a movie theater,
finding seats as the house lights dim
and the previews start.

Locked in a state of solitude,
I gaze at them with envy.
For I remain alone . . .
a single ticket purchased,
no fingers entwined in a warm lap,
no shared overpriced soda or tub of popcorn,
no arm around her shoulder,
pushing aside her long brown hair.

But I am able to forget my life
while the sprockets are engaged.
The shuttering picture seduces me again,
and I become numb to everything—
until the last frame passes,
when knowledge of my isolation
rumbles like a stagecoach procession
across the Arizona desert
in a John Ford Western.

Then the film noir,
black and white feeling returns.
And as the end credits roll,
I stand up and flee
the darkness of the theater,
stepping into the artificial light
of the shopping mall parking lot.

Left-Hand Fetish

With regard to women,
I am obsessed with one body part.
If I spot a woman I like
seated in a crowded café,
or walking through an airport,
my eyes travel directly
to the top of her left hand.
I need to know right away:
Does she wear an engagement ring
or wedding band?
Is she free to love me,
if she so chooses?
Or is she already partnered
with another man?

The Look

I noticed that look—
that look that
she was looking
at him instead of me.

I was neither cast aside,
nor dismissed outright,
but much worse—
completely overlooked.

Hurtful Words

The voice of a woman
I admire from afar
pierces the afternoon air.
Her voice mingles
with other sounds
inside the lobby
of the Phoenix Art Museum
on a Saturday in February.
The woman does not
intend to be cruel.
Yet she crushes my heart,
dispersing romantic hope,
when she delivers
a simple sentence,
beginning with the words:
“My boyfriend is . . .”
She proceeds to tell a co-worker
about her weekend plans,
but I stop listening,
as I realize
there’s no point
to knowing more.

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May You Live

I was leafing through a hefty stack of unpublished poems in my home office yesterday, and this one struck me. I think the you referenced in the poem is actually me—so I need to heed my own advice.

May You Live

May you come to the realization
That you have no control.

May you relinquish your desire
To dictate the path of your existence.

May you surrender to the absurdity
Of this exercise in futility,

Understanding that this beautiful mess
Known as life will lead you
where it wants you to go. No exceptions.

May you realize that death is rushing toward you,
And it’s coming for all of us.

May you realize that your family and friends
Will be unable to spare you from this fate.

Why do I pester you with these dark thoughts?
Simply so you’ll pause to appreciate the few moments
We are granted on the surface of this earth.

The chance to mix and mingle
And touch and caress with flesh and spirit.

The opportunity to laugh and love and interact
before disease and illness and old age

Make us weary of carrying around
A body that will soon be a corpse.

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