Among the mothers I remember today — Mother’s Day — is my grandmother Chansom. I never knew her. She died of cancer when my mother, the youngest of eight children, was still in high school. She is a ghost to me. The spirit world in which she lives is one that I have had to imagine from the handful of stories told to me by my mother and aunties, along with an old family portrait of her surrounded by her children. She, like so many who die young, has become the most beautiful, graceful of ghosts, gliding through a world I imagine.
This lives and moves
in imagination: a black and white
story to match the photo
from which she steps out
and into the rest of the day.
My grandmother walks
the streets of Chiang Mai,
surrounded by her eight
children. She is not
harried, but serene, beautiful,
dressed in a blouse, straight skirt,
high heels. Some of the
children are already young adults,
ready for the world. They
shepherd the younger ones,
including my pig-tailed
mother, five years old.
My grandmother will die young.
But on this day she glides along
the busy sidewalk, pointing to
the things she wants the oldest
children to buy from the street vendors:
meat, vegetables, sticky rice.
Crowds part, bicycles and motorbikes slow
to let her cross. She floats through
the gate and into the house that,
years later, will be gone, lost in fire.