Friday, December 06, 2024

Poem for Blanca on the 30th Anniversary of Her Heavenly Birthday

 Melinda Palacio



My mom was disappointed when she saw that all of her photographs from Hawaii were in black and white. Here she imaged reliving lush waterfalls and the fun trip the three of us took, my mom, grandmother, and myself in 1989. I have one of those photos of her being chummy with a fire dancer. How I miss our time together, especially around the holidays. She would have been 73 yesterday, December 5. When the grieving and nostalgia hit, I feel a little sideways, kind of like this photo. However, if one of my fellow bloggers can turn the photo around, please advise. Thank you. ( rotated but it acquired a watermark)


  1. Ode to the Plumeria in Her Hair

    Melinda Palacio

O sweet scent of a plumeria

affixed to the left side of her hair.

A single mom, she welcomes a local catch.

Unruly locks secure the fragile flower 

as she walks along Waikiki beach.

A Chicana in Honolulu, she becomes 

a wahine for a day, swims in Hanauma Bay, 

tries poi and banana bread offered to her 

by a woman waiting for a bus. I decline.

She never refuses an elder. 

In her short shorts, lathered in Banana Boat

tanning oil, mom teaches me how

to sway my hips hula style.

Sit next to her and the plumeria’s perfume

lands sweeter than any ripened fruit.

The flower’s center is infant seashell color,

coral born out of an explosive ocean swell.

A hint of yellow surrounding its center

and the iris of the petal is a fortune teller.

At the end of the day, white petals brown.

Tomorrow, our last day in paradise,

she will find a fresh bloom. Every day 

her hair exudes the aroma of summer.

O, how I miss those warm summer nights 

when she was still alive. A grown plumeria

cutting from a friend’s tree sways

in my backyard, a reminder of mom,

our summers together and

her unwavering love for me. 


1 comment:

msedano said...

From now on when I see plumeria I will think of Blanca and her joyousness.