This post is for Amy and Denise and Laurie and Jane and for my mother.
Lately I have been rocked by the return of the kind of savage grief I thought I left behind in my wildly emotive and medication-less youth — the kind of grief that kicks you in the stomach, leaves you blind with pain, slaps shut your mouth and your mind.
Over the past year or so, several good friends have experienced the loss of a son. Not a baby, which is unforgiving in its own way, but of a fully grown adult. For me, the mother of a deeply beloved son, the shock of a new reality without one’s child is like staring into the sun. Unimaginable.
The Unimaginable Grief, imagined
There was me
before there was you.
But always
there was the leaving –
first you breathed in
me
and then out,
the breast and then the weaning.
You walked
and then away
out of the dailyness of our lives
to your own life
not here.
But always
here
under my heart
which beat for you
and
my lungs
when I breathed for you
but
when you no longer breathe,
then
what is my heart beating for?
Very powerful MB
LikeLike
No one told us it would be this way. Eyes averted, as if that can save us from knowing.’Til the coin is tossed and it is your turn.
WHITE NOISE
His words wisp and rise
in a smoky, rank cloud
that circles the ceiling.
Inside my chest
something collapses
and my heart presses
hard and heavy
into my bowels.
Deep breath in,
then no breath at all.
Outside the winter window
the world has frozen.
Someone faraway is shouting
but I cannot make out the words.
Everything is shrinking.
There is only now,
in this room,
with the buzzing lights,
and my pounding pulse that beats:
Do not let go.
Do not let go.
LikeLike