Elizabeth McMunn-Tetangco
Earth’s Birthday Party at the Retirement Home
At the Earth’s birthday party,
we don’t celebrate in years.
That’s not a thing,
the kids might say, or maybe
did. Years
were a construct, a way Earth
could see itself.
It was like pictures:
here I was in my goth phase, and here’s
where I had dinosaurs. Earth
couldn’t talk to us, by now, its teeth
were gone. We draped
a sash across its shoulders, found a crown. It
was a theme, as much as anything,
a way to pick the music. Green and blue and brown
balloons, just like from space.
Aged to perfection, said a sign,
like Earth was food.
We had a cake and sang and Earth blew
out its candles, asked
who everybody was, when we would
leave. We laughed and laughed. When
it rained, we moved
the party back indoors.
Something happened, and the toilet
overflowed, ran down the hall.
If no one cleans it, there’s
a canyon, someone said, like
this was news.
Elizabeth McMunn-Tetangco lives in California’s Central Valley and works as a librarian at UC Merced. Her work has appeared in numerous print and online journals and in several chapbooks. She co-edits One Sentence Poems and First Frost.