ELLIPSE
I’ve been in Finland for a year
One loop around the sun
An ellipse, or maybe an ellipsis
When we arrived, I thought we could rest
When we arrived, I didn’t think we would keep moving
Not seven times, no…
From the Helsinki apartment in Punavuori
With the glassed-in balcony
And the sofa and tea lights and blankets
And the view of rust Autumn leaves
Where I drank my morning coffee
To the Iso Omena apartment that was sold
Iso Omena, The Big Apple
Finland’s Sherman Oaks Galleria
Where teens smoke and swear by the Alepa bikes
Perkele, perkele, perkele, they say
I wasn’t sad to leave, who wants to live by the mall
To the red Dragsfjärd cottage by the sea
Where I marveled at yellow-green ribbons
That danced across a canvas of ink
Those Northern Lights
Where I watched the snow fall from a sauna window
Where we turned the white lawn into choirs of angels
Where my daughter moved from bed to desk
With the aid of the coffee I brought
Up the winding farmhouse-style stairs
Such a long commute to school
She sighed
To the Matinkylä apartment
Where building renovation made my ears ring
Where daily walks beside the sea kept me sane
Through the long wait for vaccination
Through the long wait for residency
Can we stay or must we go
I wondered
For 7 long months
Through unanswered job applications
Through the rain and snow and sea ice
When the frozen sea became a continuation of the land
And Finns walked on water to the Temple of Poseidon
Through the dark Winter
That would not release its grip
Not even in April
Into the heady melt of Spring
When color cracked white Winter’s icy hand
Green and red, purple and pink, yellow and blue
Into the relief of acceptance
Residency, Oleskeluplupa, Uppehållstillstånd
Into the pain of separation
When my partner took the only job offered
In California
And left before the snow melted
And silence echoed louder than the din of construction
Into Summer
When the tough construction dudes in neon
Set out birch branches for Juhannus
And a pretty pink Marimekko tablecloth
And I walked alone to admire the sun that barely set
On the longest most magical day of the year
So to California?
Because I told him I would try it
Because the Cali corp dangled a job
When none in Finland had
And I mulled departure
An amputation of a mother from her children,
Impossible
So I lingered
Because I couldn’t leave them
Because the light was back all day long
And noone cut the dandelions down
Or the forget-me-nots, or the fireweed, daisies and harebells
The Water lily, yellow Iris, and the grand dame
The Lily of the Valley, Finland’s national bloom
Thrive here, the wildflowers whispered
Nature is on steroids in Finland
my daughter said
And my son and daughter and I swam in the warm sea
And ate cardamom-infused pulla
Americans love korvapuusti, I am told
To the US
Where a return became a visit
To the dearest of old friends and family
Where laughter rang and loneliness vanished
Where the grand Pacific crooned a siren song
With the wash of each wave
And I remembered how much I loved
The sight of Mount Rainier at sunset
Where I jetted between states
Where I saw pillars of smoke
As high as the wing of the plane
And I thought, cause and effect
Where the homeless slept under bridges
Where I could no longer walk where I wanted
Because each of the cardinal directions
Was no longer safe
Where catalytic converters were stolen
And Dove soap was under lock and key
At the grocery
So to Finland again
Like a boomerang
Where the sky was cornflower blue
And the air so sweet, I gulped
Ravenous after smoky Western skies
Where construction had torn our balcony down
And the windows were covered in plastic wrap
And could not be opened
.
So to Rööperi again
To a view of an oxidized church steeple
And rainbows over a park
Where children play and pensioners talk on benches
Safely
To where my sweetheart has returned
But I do not know if he will stay
And I eat pulla on another balcony with my children
I sometimes wake
In the tender hours before dawn
And I wonder
Where am I?
I am here
Where I have everything I need
And maybe more.