This poem is a flow of interconnected stories, emotions, and experiences. It's an exploration of the human condition, delving into themes of trauma, pain, forgiveness, and the complexities of family relationships and drawing on the wish for one big poem that lays these themes bare. 
 
The poem jumps between different timelines and perspectives, creating a sense of disjointedness and fragmentation that mirrors the brokenness of the characters.
										If I had one wish 
It would be for a poem of all poems 
A symphony of words uniting the past and present in one big orchestra 
For this pen of mine is a window to a thousand stories 
Inside the poem of a broken young woman is another poem 
Of a deadbeat father 
And inside the poem of a deadbeat father is another poem 
Of a little boy 
Who wakes up to the bellows of a father who is not dead  
but beats him blue black and all the shades his brown eyes do not have 
For many years he tiptoes around his own house like a stray cat.  
One wrong move away from a well placed kick. 
There, he quickly learns discernment is  survival 
So he knows to know when his  father’s mouth becomes a resting place for gin and all the curses he could utter  
He knows to know when to run from the rage he calls father. 
 
So on the day he fathers a daughter of his own 
He runs 
Unable to bear the thought of his last name attached to someone he couldn’t love 
Maybe one day, the broken young woman ---his daughter would understand the poem of her deadbeat father and the pain he couldn’t shake. 
 
Today is fathers day and, Fathers Day is a tedious conversation for the broken young woman 
“Let him go” the preacher says “let your father go” and she wonders if he didn’t already leave 
How long does she keep on the game of forgiving until she can return to her anger 
For all she knows is the poem about her deadbeat father,  
But inside that poem is another poem of a man 
 who just could not give what he did not have. 
So, today, if I had one wish, 
 It would be for a poem of all poems.