Nobody can account for her.
 	She's ninety-six and still climbing
 	roofs to pick off moss
 	the way some people
 	keep clipboards by their beds
 	to claim thoughts after dark.
 	A middle child,
 	her kettles never full,
 	a planet on the edge of extinction.
 	When she puts away dried apples
 	her attics fill with harvest.
 	Sacs of desiccated plenty
 	hang light from the rafters,
 	reminders of her garden.
 	Each summer she sifts roses for sachet,
 	scatters them onto screens,
 	dries the petals to press
 	the sun's claim on her yields.
Joan Maiers taught writing for returning students at Marylhurst College in Lake Oswego, Oregon when this article appeared. "Life Cycle" was written for her grandmother who lived to be 102.
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