Cleaning Ritual
She scrubbed the tile grout as if to undo something terrible
For she never spoke about certain abuse as a child, unforgettable
She often shouted, “this dirt will be the death of me”
Never stopping to think, cleaning was not some kind of deity
She uttered, “I was raised in utter, downright dirty terrain”
To where she could not bring her friends to this unsightly domain
For there were roaches on the wall & scum on the drinking glass
Which her parents didn’t seem to notice, not terribly high-class
In fact, her father, when she was a child, once made a hideous error
By placing glue in her privates as she screamed in sheer terror
For he kept the tube of glue and antibiotics close together
In his toolbox, in the closet, where it was a pitch-black endeavor
Indeed, her parents were somewhat primitive you may surmise
And lost their family in the Holocaust, which was to their demise
For her mother would sing and dance in one given moment
Which quickly changed to sadness and depressive torment
So, it wasn’t by mere chance that this lady had a cleaning ritual
Which tormented her family; for her moods were so conditional