Friday, March 16, 2012
Loss of Grace
Stale
smoke hanging in the air, like cooled grease a top a day old soup.
Lonely, longing, my
mother is staring out the front window. I don’t know what she feels.
I can see it in her
face, in her movement.
Can hear it in her
silence. Yet I don’t know it.
I want to say something,
But I merely walk
through, dispelling the cloud.
Yesterday we buried her
mother. The wind so cold, hot tears burn and freeze,
And the simple pine box
forlorn and tragic in the blistering snows.
So often we use the word
tragedy for situations that have nothing to do with tragedy.
A sudden untimely death
is terrible yes, but it is not the fall of hero. Not the desolation
Of a noble soul brought
to its knees by fallen nature. But a little grandmother, not breaking 90
pounds,
Why does this feel like
tragedy?
No fatal flaw, except
the loss of immortality so long ago in that ancient grove.
Her leaving has
diminished me and I feel my flaw will be her absence.
I do not envy her though, as I have other friends.
Their deaths seem
Blind. I understand them
only because I long to join them.
Each morning and night,
even as I simply eat lunch, I think of these things,
A struggle I wish I had
the courage to be done with.
But this little
grandmother, her blue eyes so clear at the end,
Made me want to be and
to give.
To see the struggle for
knowledge and to love it.
To cradle each beautiful
word lovingly.
To love and be loved.
To live.
These things only I
understand, but how to explain it to another?
Each day, the little
things, the foolish words --
An I hate you, a Why
don’t you just leave, a Someone has to be in last place, a You think you’re so
smart --
Gnaw mercilessly at that
glimpse of passion,
Wearing away, breaking
down, drawing breath from breath,
And then, again, as I
think of these things, I wonder why
She finally struggled so
before the end
And why she stayed so
long.
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