Dreaming in Istanbul
A poem for my father

Dreaming in Istanbul
I dreamed last night of my father,
rescuing me from a prison cell
where I was suddenly incarcerated.
I think it was my words.
Some Turkish tyrant got offended
& stuck me in jail.
I was not distressed. Help was on the way.
On your mission to rescue me, you drove the same
U-Haul in which you transported me across America.
Albuquerque, New Mexico. Texas.
Oklahoma. Kansas. Missouri.
My life was compressed inside your van.
In that summer of 1999, Jimi Hendrix & Bob Dylan
sang “All Along the Watchtower” as we sped past
Motel 6's strewn along the dusty deserts of Route 66.
You grew bleary-eyed from lack of sleep.
I imagined you as the hippie you once were.
Someone to whom I could speak
If only I had been able to resolve
my fears of living and of dying,
without having achieved my dreams.
I see you vividly in Istanbul’s sloping streets,
wiling away the hours on cards and tea
inhaling shisha occasionally.
Existing in the moment,
living life to its fullest,
unlike me,
terrified of turning twenty,
unaware that our time on earth together was limited
& that you would not always be there
to rescue me.
About the Creator
Rebecca Ruth Gould
I am author of the award-winning book Writers and Rebels: The Literature of Insurgency in the Caucasus (Yale University Press, 2016). My Wikipedia page.
Subscribe to my YouTube Channel Poetry & Protest. ⬆️



Comments (1)
This is so creative