Newsletter sign up

Be the first to know when new American Life in Poetry columns are live.

Column 089

No Children, No Pets

Intro by Ted Kooser
12.13.2006

Loss can defeat us or serve as the impe­tus for pos­i­tive change. Here, Sue Ellen Thomp­son of Con­necti­cut shows us how to mourn inevitable changes, tuck the mem­o­ries away, then go on to see the pos­si­bil­i­ty of a new and promis­ing chap­ter in one’s life. 

No Children, No Pets

I bring the cat’s body home from the vet’s
in a running-shoe box held shut
with elastic bands. Then I clean
the corners where she has eaten and
slept, scrubbing the hard bits of food
from the baseboard, dumping the litter
and blasting the pan with a hose. The plastic
dishes I hide in the basement, the pee-
soaked towel I put in the trash. I put
the catnip mouse in the box and I put
the box away, too, in a deep
dirt drawer in the earth.

When the death-energy leaves me,
I go to the room where my daughter slept
in nursery school, grammar school, high school,
I lie on her milky bedspread and think
of the day I left her at college, how nothing
could keep me from gouging the melted candle-wax
out from between her floorboards,
or taking a razor blade to the decal
that said to the firemen, “Break
this window first.” I close my eyes now
and enter a place that’s clearly
expecting me, swaddled in loss
and then losing that, too, as I move
from room to bone-white room
in the house of the rest of my life.

Share this column

Disclaimer

We do not accept unsolicited submissions

We do not accept unsolicited submissions. American Life in Poetry is made possible by The Poetry Foundation (www.poetryfoundation.org), publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Reprinted from Nimrod International Journal: The Healing Arts, Vol. 49, No. 2, Spring-Summer, 2006, by permission of the author. Copyright © 2006 by Sue Ellen Thompson, whose latest book is The Golden Hour, Autumn House Press, 2006. Introduction copyright © 2024 by The Poetry Foundation.