Some objects remain after a loved voice has gone quiet, holding warmth in a shape the hand still understands. This poem follows a blue apron in an old kitchen: a small emblem of care, endurance, and the love that keeps working through ordinary things.
On the nail by the kitchen door
the blue apron keeps its place,
flour-dimmed, weather-soft,
with daylight folded in the hem.
No one ties its strings now,
yet it remembers a waist,
the way a morning opens
when someone chooses mercy.
I hear hands inside its silence:
rinsing sorrow at the sink,
slicing bread without complaint,
mending the world by crumbs.
In one pocket sleeps a button,
in the other, a bent pin;
small household moons still keeping
watch over our unfinished nights.
It is not a flag of triumph.
It promises no shining cure.
It only says: stay near the table,
the soup can warm again.
I press my cheek against the cotton,
and absence loosens its cold hand;
it smells of clean cloth drying,
of someone saving us from falling.
So I tie the blue apron on,
not to replace the tenderness,
but to learn from all its gestures
how to stand softly in the day.
A window brightens the worn table,
a bowl waits, the morning stays;
in every small thing we prepare,
love keeps finding work to do.


