Peg Cherrin-Myers
Incognito Mode
Pastor John leaves multiple messages
letting us know it’s a safe space now.
Says there has been an experience
of spiritual rebirth, a finding
of faith with one and only J.C.
In the rehab parking lot,
after my brother and I abruptly leave
our father’s room, my brother says
I’m not gonna let that man make me start
drinking again. Says his wife points
out every time he’s standing like our father,
every time he sounds like our father,
which gives him the heebie-jeebies
just thinking about it, and he shivers
like a wet dog trying to get dry. And I wonder
if he ever allows himself to enjoy
becoming Dad?
When I visit my 22-year-old daughter in Philly,
the day I leave to fly back to Detroit,
she’s already left for work.
Just before I call an Uber to the airport,
I hide $1, $5, and $10 bills around her apartment,
behind her childhood cat’s picture, inside
an Anthropologie volcano candle, around
the handle of 2% milk, underneath
a row of forks, tucked into a roll of paper towels,
and inside the left arm of her favorite
lounging cardigan.
After work, she phones and says,
Thanks for the cash, Mom! and I ask
how much ‘ya find? $50 bucks!!!
I laugh out loud and say
there’s still five more dollars, kiddo.
In ones!
born again ...
my father coming back
as himself
About the Author
Peg Cherrin-Myers lives in Southeast Michigan. They are a stay-at-home poet who spreads peanut butter on white bread, folds it in half, and dips it into a hot bowl of chili. They wear rainbow Tevas and drive a pickup. Their work has appeared in Frogpond, Stanchion Zine, Kingfisher Journal, Periodicities, and many others. Find them on X (formerly Twitter): @pegcherrinmyers.
I love the poignant dark humor of this.
Thank you, Kristen. I can’t post emojis here, but here’s me holding up two hands forming a heart shape.