A Dream of Matzoh Ball Soup
My grandmother didn’t die of a stroke
when I was in college, no, no, no,
she rose up out of her wheelchair
& danced the hora with the nurses,
then came home to us & cooked
enough matzoh ball soup for an army
& forty years later, we’re still eating
that soup for supper, then raising hands
in the air in praise & later, after
she sings me to sleep with a Yiddish song
or two, I dream of her salt & pepper hair
blowing & glowing in the April light,
her eyes squinting to raisins
but when I wake it’s always raining
& she’s not here, not anywhere
but in the photo on my desk
& all that soup we’ve been consuming
is the ever salty broth of sorrow.
*
Lana Hechtman Ayers’ poems appear in Peregrine, The London Reader, and Rattle, among others. Her ninth poetry collection, The Autobiography of Rain is forthcoming in 2024 from Fernwood Press.

Beautiful poem. Heartfelt without sentimentality.