First a note on the photos: which of these women might be the poem's speaker? Now,
on to the work itself.
In poetry, humor is such a tricky thing, a tightrope—veer
left and you fall into superficiality or mean sarcasm or commercial slickness and pandering;
veer right and you reveal an underbelly too dark for genuine levity--no belly laughs, no
breeziness at cocktail parties, no appreciation of the absurdity of it all. It's all too grave for that, as Dostoevsky knew. 
In my college years and into my twenties, I heard more than once that America’s only contributions to world literature were the short story as a genre and American humor. We were supposed to feel bad about that—inferior, provincial lightweights. Well, if those are our only contributions—and how can one make such a claim in the first place?—I say we’ve done pretty well, as I whisk dreary dust off my shirt and visor from long, long, dark, dark European tomes. Especially on the continent, none of the languages have a word for "concise."

In my college years and into my twenties, I heard more than once that America’s only contributions to world literature were the short story as a genre and American humor. We were supposed to feel bad about that—inferior, provincial lightweights. Well, if those are our only contributions—and how can one make such a claim in the first place?—I say we’ve done pretty well, as I whisk dreary dust off my shirt and visor from long, long, dark, dark European tomes. Especially on the continent, none of the languages have a word for "concise."
So Hannah Gamble’s “Growing a Bear” interests me quite
a bit. I hope no one disputes that it’s funny. But is it fluff? We’re back to
The School of Accessibility and the constant question it presents: is the work
mere entertainment or does it have enough heft to be labeled significant
literature—enough insight into and commentary on big issues like the
environment or social justice or simply being a lone human with human
complexity? And is the work’s expression artful enough to make us take the
piece seriously? 
After reading “Growing a Bear” a few times,
I’m not at all sure what the Bear is, but I think it's vaguely naughty and funny and grave. How would you pin it down? Or would
you decline the invitation to pin it down?
And did you enjoy the poem?