John Tustin
When I was a little boy there was a snowstorm
And it lasted for days.
When it was over the snow was piled so high
That I was trapped on my dead end street
With my brothers and my parents
And the neighbors.
All I can remember is the mountain of snow the snowplows
Placed right on my streetcorner
And that the neighborhood kids and my brother and I
Had some snowball fights.
The one memory I have, a moment indelible in my mind,
Is looking out the window at all the snow.
The blinding white of it, the totality of it.
I looked out wanting to be in it
And I looked out happy I was safe and warm
With the radiator hissing as I stood there in my jammies
Thinking about whether to go outside for a while
Or find some paper and a pencil and draw –
Knowing I could come back in the moment I was cold
Or something went awry.
All that snow and machinery of humanity at a standstill
While Paul Asaparti and Paul Matto pummeled the Fox twins with snowballs
As my brother Robert made them more and more to throw.
I think that maybe the blizzard of ‘78
Was the last time that I felt really safe.
I know I haven’t felt safe since
For more than a day,
If that.