Generic Indian Ennui
My mom and I don’t spend
 all day talking about the white
 priests who raped Great Grandma
 Marie, unless it’s a poem. Suffering
 is boring. Do you know how big
 the word genocide is? How long.
 I’m taking a class on Indian
 temporalities. I tell my mom about it
 only when we’re in the car. Stand still
 on CA-whatever west. Her back hunched
 like a buffalo over the steering wheel.
 The traffic like I don’t know. Some
 imagery here about burden, endurance.
 I say, we talked about the apocalypse
 today. Oh? she says, a feigned
 interest to my feigned interest.
 Both her hands clenched, one
 steering. She closed her eyes
 a while ago. Yeah. It was about how
                 we are living
 our ancestors’ dystopia. I try to talk
 about it like the class did. Like there’s joy
 in surviving. In knowing
 the worst has already come. I curl
 my fingers under her fist, disarm it.
 Does that make you feel better?
 My mom falls back, opens
 her eyes. Not really, she says.
Source: Poetry (June 2024)


