This content was published: February 22, 2022. Phone numbers, email addresses, and other information may have changed.
Two Deep Breaths: Donetsk
By Caitlin Dwyer Young
Do you ever read about a place online, or hear some city mentioned in passing, and wonder where is that? Maybe you can鈥檛 quite catch the pronunciation, or the name is so unfamiliar it startles you.
That鈥檚 how 鈥淒onetsk,鈥 by , begins. She hears the name of a Ukrainian city on the radio and because it is foreign and hard for her to pronounce, she immediately begins to associate it with other sounds: her daughter鈥檚 voice, birds, a waitress at the diner.
Her poem moves so far, and so quickly, it鈥檚 easy to forget what she鈥檚 comparing these things to. By the time she gets to her neighbor鈥檚 knuckles cracking as he chops wood, and her baby soiling the bathwater, I had almost forgotten that the poem began with a 鈥渢ragedy on today鈥檚 radio.鈥
But that鈥檚 Kuipers鈥 point, I think. Donetsk has been a site of violence and separatist activity since 2014; as I write this, it鈥檚 been formally recognized by Russia as an independent republic, perhaps in a pretext for war. But for Kuipers, 鈥渙n the other side of the distant world,鈥 it鈥檚 far removed from her daily life.
Which doesn鈥檛 mean that Kuipers doesn鈥檛 care. Indeed, I think she cares deeply, and struggles as we all do to come to terms with how to stay present with tragedies that do not affect her directly. The poem鈥檚 real question is not 鈥榳hat鈥檚 happening in Ukraine?鈥 but how we stay mindful of difficult circumstances in far-off places, when what鈥檚 happening here and now wraps us in our own consuming, personal context.
What I love about this poem is how indirect it is. Kuipers clearly wanted to write about what she heard on the radio. But she doesn鈥檛 give us scenes of political violence in Ukraine. Instead, we follow the poet鈥檚 mind through Cracker Barrel pancakes and memories of childhood pets. Everything is like something else, taking her farther and farther away from that original tragedy 鈥 and she can鈥檛 quite square what she鈥檚 heard on the radio with the sun, the warmth, her daughter reading a picture book.
How do any of us make sense of tragedy? How do we acknowledge that something terrible is going on elsewhere, when what鈥檚 right in front of us is okay? It鈥檚 a difficult set of questions to answer, but in a time of huge, almost inconceivable global concerns 鈥 the pandemic, climate change 鈥 Kuipers鈥 questions feel like the right ones to ask.
Donetsk
The tragedy on today鈥檚 radio sounds like my daughter
trying to say 鈥渄onuts鈥 for the first time,
or like the chirp of the two lovebirds I loved for just
a year when I was fourteen, their eager
hiccup when I took them from their cage
and placed one on each shoulder. It could be
the voice of the waitress at Cracker Barrel,
a pen in the corner of her sour pucker,
asking if I鈥檝e finished with my plate of soggy
pancakes, or the pop and crack of my old
neighbor鈥檚 knuckles as he grasps the axe
and takes a swing. Or maybe it鈥檚 the hushed
suck when I pull the plug from the tub drain
after the baby鈥檚 shat in her bathwater
and I have to wash it out and start all over again.
It sounds far away, the way everything does
here where it鈥檚 always warm, always unseasonably
sunny, where I鈥檓 always somebody鈥檚 mother
turning the pages of some forgettable picture book
on the other side of the distant world.
Writer and editor Keetje Kuipers is the author of three books of poems: Beautiful in the Mouth, Keys to the Jail, and All Its Charms. Keetje has taught at universities across the country, including as an Associate Professor at Auburn University where she was Editor of Southern Humanities Review. Keetje was appointed Editor of Poetry Northwest in 2020. Keetje lives with her wife and children in Missoula where she is Visiting Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Montana. She is currently at work on a fourth book of poems, as well as a novel set in Wyoming and a memoir about the seven months she spent living alone and off the grid, two hours down a dirt road from the nearest human being.