For the promises I never made, or kept; for the
friends I wronged, or let down, or lost touch with;
for doors I failed to hold open, grandmothers who
bore their groceries unaided, children who asked
for nothing—a high-five or word of praise;

for the Azaleas I let wither, and saplings orphaned
at the nursery, weeping in their pots; for branches
untrimmed, and unneighborly feuds; for the times
I left dog poop where it lay, and the times I raged
against those who did the same; for my many rages,

justified and not; for unkind thoughts, and deeds,
and turns of phrase, though I knew how kindness could
save a life; for the leak I didn’t fix, the mold that grew,
the money I wasted on this, and whims, and petty wants;
for all that I could have fixed, or built, or torn down;

for when I did too little, or too much, or nothing at all;
for cowardice, and conceit dressed as bravery; for
ill-fitting clothes, and shaggy beard, and ill-timed jokes;
for my belief, or lack of belief, in God, in Democracy, in
this or that war; for the peace I shattered with talking…

Selected byRaymond Huffman
Image credit:Louisa Billeter
Andy Posner

Andy Posner grew up in Los Angeles and earned an MA in Environmental Studies at Brown. While there, he founded Capital Good Fund, a nonprofit that provides financial services to low-income families. When not working, he enjoys reading, writing, watching documentaries, and ranting about the state of the world. He has had his poetry published in several journals, including Burningword Literary Journal (which nominated his poem ‘The Machinery of the State’ for the Pushcart Poetry Prize), Noble/Gas Quarterly, and The Esthetic Apostle.