
Bread
That year we learned the true language of fear.
I baked boule and you haunted medical sites.
You said to arrive I must first depart
or be willing to suffer self-awareness. Let’s not
mention our pact just yet. My basic boule requires a
Dutch oven, 20 ounces of flour, water, yeast and salt.
At twenty I learned the finer points
of sausage-making, how to butcher chicken, and
that your hair smelled like dawn’s last flower.
Back then we owned the night. Now I harvest
wild yeast and sharpen pencils, make to-do lists,
pour Chianti, run numbers. I agreed
to your proposal. It would be a kindness, you said.
The pancreas produces hormones
and aids digestion. I chopped off my left thumbtip
and a year later the abscission point
still felt numb. After rolling the dough
into a ball, let it proof for an hour in an oiled bowl.
We shared a taste for sharp cheese
but never agreed on pillows. You loved
down comforters and found vultures fascinating.
Years together honed our lives
but we never considered what that meant. Score
the dough, bake it for 30 minutes with the lid on,
remove the lid and bake for another 15.
Kneading resembles breathing: in,
out. Rise, fall. Bright lights made your eyes water,
so I kept them dimmed. You swallowed
and said “Tell me how to knead bread.”
With the heel of your right hand, push down
and forward, applying steady pressure.
The dough should move under your hand.
Within minutes it will transform.
* * *
“Bread” was first published in Extract(s) in April 2015.

Wow!
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Thanks!
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🙂
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Thank you.
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the turns in this are nicely handled.
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The first complete draft of this one was quite different, but over time it came into shape.
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draft, draft & draft some more i say. Auden said something along the lines of a poem is never complete unless you say it is. Can’t agree more. i’d never finish anything if i didn’t just say “enough”.
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I can’t help but continue to revise, even after they’ve been published. Even this one…
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I can’t help but see your comment on a comment as a metaphor for making bread.
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Rise, rise, rise!
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I adore this! Baking bread is one of my few domestic skills. “kneading resembles breathing” is perfect!
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Thanks, Meg. I don’t bake bread often enough, but enjoy it when I do – the smells, the feel of the dough. Nothing like it.
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Agreed! 🙂
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Same here — and bread making has a way of seeping into your life and writing and influencing all of it. So I love this. I know that recipe too. Mine is a no-knead, and I bake it in a covered cast-iron casserole.
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Right? Bread – the stuff of life! Literally and figuratively!
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I think the no-knead has better flavor, but it requires planning. So when the urge hits me, I use this recipe. And I also like kneading. 🙂
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Oh, yes!
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Stunning.
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So pleased you find it so. Thank you.
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I can’t look away from this. It is so well composed.
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Thank you. A high compliment, indeed.
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A lovely piece.
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Thank you, Christine.
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Love this.
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Thanks, Michael.
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Now that is some mighty fine poetry!
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Thank you, Chris. Much appreciated.
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You said to arrive I must first depart— this is profound.
Lord Shiva – the destroyer – is also the creator of all arts. His dance of destruction – Tandon Nastya – is also the beginning of all sublimely beautiful dance forms.
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Now I must view the dance. And thank you!
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Sorry for the autocorrect – it is TANDAV NRITYA not Tandon Nastya.
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Ah, autocorrect. When I’m able, I turn it off, as otherwise it annoys me constantly.
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Yes.
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One of several versions in youtube: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=O3aNiZwLmw4
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Excellent! Thank you.
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Wonderfully needed!
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Thanks very much.
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Absolutely stellar poem, Bob! Love it, love it, love it! Really connected with me – this is what I call food for the soul!
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Thank you, Lynne. So pleased to connect!
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Beautiful, Bob; deeply touching.
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As always, Cate, thank you!
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This is a stunning poem. The two thoughts, baking bread and the memory of a loved one’s illness entwined is wonderful. I can’t even point out a particular line because it’s the whole (although kneading is like breathing–I will never again knead dough without thinking that.)
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Thanks, Merril. I’m so pleased to infiltrate your kneading process. 🙂
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🙂
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this piece touches me deeply. thank you.
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Am grateful for your comment, Nancie. Thank you.
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That kept me riveted! 🙂
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Thank you, Alexis. I’m glad it resonated.
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I love the parallels and the sensual experiences throughout. Wow!
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Thank you, Tiffany.
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You’re welcome, Bob! It was an amazing journey.
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I’m so pleased you felt it worthwhile.
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I remember the first time I read this how fascinated I was by the back and forth between the mundane and the tragic. It still moves me.
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I think most of our living occurs between the mundane and tragic. Mine leans toward the mundane.
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Thank goodness.
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My daily drama centers on what to cook for dinner or whether I should check the mail. And I’m grateful for that.
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Great poem, Robert. The whole arc of it had a strange sense of timing that only a poem about bread and love, written by you, could have.
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Thanks, Jeff. Cooking for loved ones is important to me. What better way to say “love” than with bread? Or a leek and camembert tart with a cornmeal crust?
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That was lovely. A gentle reminder of a similar incident in my own life. So similar in fact, I am amazed at the level of emotional response I am having. Thank you.
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Thank you, Michael. I’m honored that this has touched you.
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Really amazing. I’m always happy to see your posts. I always take something from them.
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That’s truly wonderful to hear. Thank you.
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Married for 56 years, went together for three. We’ve learned to breathe together–we’ve kneaded each other.
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Though we’ve been married only 31 years, I know the feeling!
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Both the comfort of the routine and the ambiguity…I can feel it. (K)
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Am grateful for your comment, and pleased you feel it.
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We are all better off for the way you answered that proposal. And also, if by some strange exigency of fate I’m only allowed to carry one object wherever I wander in this life, let it be a Dutch oven!
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Dutch ovens rule! But are they ever heavy.
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This poem has everything, says everything, is everything…
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You are too kind. Thank you.
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I love how you’ve kneaded together the breadmaking process with life’s process (see what i did there, lol). Very clever
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Ha! Better to knead than need. 🙂
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What a loving poem. The sensuality of the bread and wife references…very romantic. And adding the “realism” of injury and illness through which you remain together… the supreme romance of familiarity. Beyond genius… we’ll have to invent a word that properly positions you are a poet of reality, making bread and love into words… a master chef of semantic cuisine.
It is not prose or poetry but the Okaji Sector; like the Twilight Zone except that every episode ends with edible enlightenment.
You are a Pulitzer Prize level poet… you are a god…
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Ah, Daniel. You are entering a dimension not of sound and space, but of mind… I hope that you found some edible enlightenment during your recent travels.
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VIet Nam has all sorts of great dishes, too many to mention. I am not a gourmand though, so my definition of great is rather plebeian. The coffee though? Magic. The South Korean (dolsot) bebimbap was great as always.
But there will NEVER be anything as soul stirring and comforting as sitting outside of my local run down laundromat at night under an awning watching the rain fall while I wait for a load of clothes to finish drying while eating a full order of takoyaki with mayonnaise on top (in Amagasaki, Japan when I lived there).
The BEST takoyaki in the world is made in Amagasaki, period, and since it was a really powerful, positive time in my life I have serious nostalgia for it.
If there is a Heaven, then I hope everyone speaks Japanese and eats takoyaki all day and night… THAT is Heaven to me… and all the greatest women in the world have names like MIyuki and Koharu.
I dream of a Paradise where we are all named Tanaka!! 🙂
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I have heard that about the coffee. Perhaps someday I’ll have the opportunity to try it. I have similar nostalgic feelings about skipping school and buying a loaf of bread, a few grams of prosciutto, and some slices of mozzarella di bufala, and wandering around downtown Bella Napoli, Naples, Italy, in the 70s. Hard to duplicate such strong sensory input. 🙂
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This one is great!
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Thank you, Mick.
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Reading this poem is like breathing in emotions and releasing memories. I love how you plait together two different realities, two different experiences and use them to counterbalance each other. This technique reminds me of Henry Reed’s “Naming of Parts.” Amazing. Beautiful. Evocative….Wonderful.
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Thank you! And what a compliment – I love that poem.
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The final transformation–very moving. It is quite a story you have told.
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Thank you, Linnet. We all transform, but at different paces.
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lovely. yes.
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Thanks, John.
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Magical!
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Thank you, Christy.
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The smell of bread always reminds me of babies. Love this poem
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The smell of bread carries so much with it, doesn’t it?
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The boule is very filling. This topic could easily become overwrought or maudlin but this boule is PERFECT. I love it! So many thoughts set in motion in my mind from reading this.
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Oh, yes. Very filling. And thank you!
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This is lovely and heartbreaking and exciting all at the same time. I love it.
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Thank you, Parker. You’re very kind.
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Brilliant, Robert. Truly. 🙂
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Thanks, Kelly! You’re always so kind.
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Certainly not a difficult way to be with respect to your writing! 🙂
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Bread and life both are being baked
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Yes, indeed.
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Thought provoking and most personal. Very nice.
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I’m pleased it resonated with you. Thank you very much.
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I like this one a lot.
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Thanks, Lola. Good to hear from you!
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The depth it brings is amazing. A very nice piece of writing indeed.
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I’m so pleased you feel that way. Thank you.
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Sings to me. One of those that really resonates and I’ll carry in my heart. Thank you!
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You have made my day. Thank you.
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This is a gorgeous poem. (I’m going to take some time later today and read all your poems.)
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Thank you, Alison. I’m thrilled that you want to read more!
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A beautiful recollection.
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Thank you.
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Such a beautiful image. I actually got tears in my eyes. My mom was always known for her famous cinnamon bread. She made it every year for Christmas and gifted it to all our friends, family, and neighbors. She would make hundred of loaves. We had to buy a separate freezer just to store them because she’d have to start baking in November to get all the bread done in time. It was tradition for my sister and I to help her with the final stage. Kneading the dough and then rolling it with cinnamon and sugar. My mom can’t bake her famous bread anymore, but the lessons we learned from her generous spirit and patient teaching lives on. I am grateful for your words reminding me of this.
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My mother did not read, but cooking was one of our greatest connections. During her final months, we spent many hours together watching cooking shows. I miss those times.
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I found this to be quite romantic . . . and saw quiet innuendos; especially in the last stanza. The scent of bread and the fragrance of love are symphonic. Am I way off here?
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I’m a proponent of letting the readers find meaning in poetry, but I don’t think you’re off the mark at all. Thank you. 🙂
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You juxtapose the finer intricacies of culinary with personal thoughts. It’s interesting to read you. Anand Bose from Kerala.
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It’s an interesting technique to use. And thank you.
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Great poem with some sharp insights. ” … to arrive I must first depart
or be willing to suffer self-awareness …” Thank you.
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Thanks very much.
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A powerful and balanced poem, and so moving, thank you. I have read it over and over want to read it again.
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Am so pleased it resonates for you. Thank you.
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Love this and so beautifully written! And the comments just keep on coming!
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Thank you, Laura. It’s always nice to receive comments – we write these things and have no idea who’ll read them or how they’ll feel.
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