Sunday, December 11, 2011

Futility

















Low winter rays burn my retinas, bite my brain
But the ice cold river whispers in my ear, promising to ease my pain.
The sun and the guard-rail are one,
My heart and the current are another.
The maelstrom seeks out my soul, like a lover
To lie forever in its icy embrace,
Frozen in a peaceful state of grace.
My tears rise as steam off the surface of the St-Lawrence
As dark thoughts come in torrents.
What if the shock awakens me to a new reality
And my mind changes, cowardly ideas loosen their hold?
Paralyzed, no longer by fear but by the cold,
It will be too late to fight the imminent brutality.
5 years have flowed under that bridge.
Laughable now, to imagine contemplating that plunge.
The futility of it, like battling a flood with a sponge.
"Bring it on!" I scream to the sky,
"Is that all you got, Big Guy?"
There is no going back, in Life or Death;
It's an onward journey, from the first to the
  ...very

        ...last


             ...breath.



Peace to all,

Andrea, Wanda, Volcandrea, whatever.

Monday, November 7, 2011

Noose

When I was 2 years old, going on 3, I was nearly hanged.

It was summer and we were camping at the lake with 5 or 6 other families, like we always did. The fathers were at work while the mothers stayed behind to look after us kids and babies.
It was an absolutely gorgeous site on Half Moon Lake. We were in a little bay with a sunny, sandy beach like light brown sugar, perfect for making mud pies, no pebbles to hurt our bare feet. The trailers were scattered amongst the trees, up a gentle rooty slope in the shade, away from the lake and closer to the quiet road. Flying squirrels would thrill us from above with their acrobatic leaps without a net. Crazed chipmunks startled and darted about on the ground.

We would have lunch and when that was cleaned up, our mothers would put us little ones in bed for a nap and the older kids, including my older brother Ross, all boys, would amuse themselves exploring the woods for salamanders or canoeing amongst the reeds to catch frogs and offering themselves as bait for leeches. Later, salt would be poured on the poor leeches and we would all watch in fascination as they wriggled and died from dehydration. I always found it looked like the scene from The Wizard of Oz, when the Wicked Witch of the East gets crushed by the tornado thrown farmhouse and her striped legs wither up and disappear beneath it. leaving only the Ruby Red Slippers behind.

The moms might pick berries, go for a swim, read or just chat while working on their tans. Nobody put sun screen on in those days; to the contrary, people buttered themselves up for roasting with baby oil.

I seem to remember that this day was particularly hot and oppressive. My mother peeled me out of my damp red and blue gingham plaid bikini bathing suit she had made herself, with the fabulous attachments of her new sewing machine my father had bought her just before I was born. She put me in my thick, white waffle-weave panties that were so soft and comfortable. I was a sensitive child, in both the tactile and emotional sense. I hated tags and stiff lace on my clothes that would annoy my skin, like nails down a chalkboard for some. An errant sock thread between my toes would trigger a frustration tantrum that would easily break my parent’s patience.

My foster sister, Bobbie, had just turned one earlier that summer. She of the chubby red cheeks and coal black, dancing eyes. Her favorite word was “tookie” (cookie). She had a fatal attraction for the lake, and would toddle off towards it as fast as her little legs could carry her at any chance she got. More than once she swallowed a good mouthful before somebody rescued her from a watery grave. Bobbie would sputter and snort for breath, then flash her bottom teeth in a devilishly angelic grin. Because of her penchant for near-death experiences, Mother got Bobbie a harness with a long tether rope tied to a tree that would just allow the toddler to reach the wet sand but not the shallows. Bobbie also got to nap in her playpen, outdoors under a canopy of trees.
I, however, had to have my daytime snooze in our pop-up tent trailer, like a big girl. When we were alone together my foster sister and I would “talk” a gibberish, a made up language that made perfect sense to us, but to no one else. We had to be separated at nap-time because we would jabber instead of resting.

Apparently, it was supposed to be a treat for me to get to doze up on my parents bunk which hovered out over the propane tank, and the eternally damp red sandy ground below. At night while camping, Bobbie and I would share the bed which magically appeared when the table where we ate breakfast and supper was folded down and covered with the seat-back cushions. We would be barricaded in our little enclosure by a guard rail on one side and Ross’s bunk on the other. The door would be locked with a hook that had been added up high so Bobbie could not break away out towards the lake for a dip.

Sometimes Ross would let us jump wildly on his bunk and use it as a trampoline. At times things became a bit chaotic as we screeched and bounced off of the taut, caramel colored canvas. And of course there was always the delicious threat from Father that if we touched the canvas we would render it “leaky”.
It was hot in the trailer but usually quiet, and there was a soothing quality to the dappled afternoon light and shadows which were created by the tall trees all around.
But this day was too hot, and the cicadas, katydids and grasshoppers were all prima donnas, trying to outdo each other.

I could not sleep, could not settle. I sang and hummed nursery rhymes, making up the words as I went, until my mother came and scolded me for not sleeping. She gave me a drink of water that tasted like the plastic blue Thermos jug that it was stored in, and left me alone again.

I  needed some air, some kind of a breeze. I rolled off the stiflingly warm sleeping bag, right to the outer edge of the bed, where I accidentally found the coolness of outside air that I sought. My body weight stretched the elastic bungy cords which held the canvas wall in place underneath the plywood platform of the bed, around little white fasteners that looked like buttons. A small slit of outside appeared. So first I poked a foot down and under the canvas, reveling in my relief. Then I turned sideways in the bed and stuck my other leg out. Pure bliss. Then I wanted my belly and arms to feel free as well, so I twisted and slipped further outside my cocoon. I hung out there for a few minutes, head inside, body outside, until I felt sufficiently peaceful and at ease to fall asleep.
But when I tried to get my arms back inside the tent to pull myself up, I found that I could not.  The canvas was tight around my neck. I thrashed my legs around outside, trying to find a foot hold to stand on, but found nothing but open space. I slipped a few more inches down so that my head was now wedged. I was caught in a death canal of my own making. My own weight suspended from my neck was beginning to feel more and more uncomfortable.    

I tried to yell for help, but soon realized that a tightness around my throat was not allowing my protest to amount to more than a feeble squawk. It felt like when I was having an asthma attack. I tried to sing nursery rhymes again, but that didn’t work either. All I wanted to do was sleep then, so I closed my eyes and drifted away.

Meanwhile, some of the other kids were now up from their nap, and were playing down at the beach with the moms sitting around in a semicircle facing the water, keeping a close eye on the older kids who were back from exploring and in need of a swim. Bobbie was up, refreshed, reenergized and ready to fill her diaper with wet sand.

One toddler, Ronnie, a fat little butter-ball of a baby was putting up a real ruckus. Standing on his mother’s lap, facing backwards over her shoulder towards the trailers, he was stomping his pudgy, rolled legs, digging his toes painfully into her thighs. He was pointing and fussing, and the ladies tried to adjust their eyes from the glaring sun of the beach to see what Ronnie saw up towards the shaded tents, but could not. They thought it must be a squirrel or something that was holding his attention. Ronnie continued his rant however, and finally blurted out the word “baby” as clearly as he had ever spoken before, and pointed directly up to where I was.

I can only imagine the utter panic and dread as my mother recognized the lifeless hanging body of one of her own children. She says it was like a nightmare, where your legs are like rubber and won’t obey your commands to run as fast as you need to escape the horror.

I don’t know who grabbed and supported me from outside or who unfastened the bungy cord releasing my neck or who came inside to rouse me from near unconsciousness or who stayed at the shore with the babies. I just know it felt good to breathe again.

It feels good to breathe.

Saturday, October 22, 2011

In A Twinkling

The sun shone while it rained,
Liquid silver drops fell from the sky.
It was not sprinkling, it was actually twinkling.
The light on the left warmed my face while the
Water from the right cooly caressed my cheek.
Contradictory signals were sent to the spine,
Who responded in kind with a shiver.
A pleasure seizure, not quite Sweet Death
But rather a sensory rebirth, a power surge.
'This is life' I think as I continue my walk,
Actually slowing my stilted pace.
People driving past think I am nuts                
And I think they may be correct.
Sometimes it rains, and sometimes it's sunny.
Often it's both, depending on where you stand.
It's a decade of drought, followed by a
Deluge out of the blue.
And you just have to go with the flow.
Throats choked with dust still ache for a drink
As the Volvos and Sony 52 inch flat screens
And the StarBucks cups float by.
Good buys. Good bye.
Things can change in a twinkling.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

At Home

When I was a young and single woman
I lived on Hope and coffee, downtown.
In the shadow of highrises, grass and affection were difficult to find.
Stumbled into love and commitment,
Crossed the bridge for a charmer from the South.
From his cottage on Gentilly is where he worked his magical powers.
He had a patch of lawn already, while I added the flowers.
We blessed every room, as I remember, but what else did we do with our time?

The waters, like the siren to the sailor,
Called me closer to Bord-de-l’eau.
Worked hard, loved harder, laughed hardest while feathering the nest.
Made our vows in the autumn with a party in the garden,
And a perfect baby was born the next July.
Revelled in all the firsts; first breath, first teeth, first tentative
steps,
Slobbery kisses and words.
Never suspecting what the future held in store.
We had it all, and wanted more.

River lost its luster. Womb, like the wind became bitter,     
Evicted precious tenant #2.
Just down the road the promise of brighter days.                
Our Union grew, despite disappointment 3 and 4.
Then another smiling baby boy landed at our door.
The feedings and diapers, tantrums and tears
It’s all a blurr really, those young mother years.
Sandbox, tricycles, kites and picnics in the park.
Walks to pre-school, baking cookies and fireworks in the dark.

Then came the tests and diagnosis.
Stress replaced sleep, worries of prognosis.
Denial morphed into too much information.
Fuses were short, words lobbed like grenades.
Wine became self medication
While doling out the bandaids.
But some wounds can never heal.
Can this be happening,
is this for real?

Bones grow softer, hair turns grey.
Children grow up while our eyes fade.
I am heartbroken, and still I stay.
Things change. Nothing is the same.
Yet again, a new street name.
Our cute little cul-de-sac, where there is nowhere to run and hide.
Lifted my gaze, amazed and pleased you were still by my side.
In each other, I think, we have found
The strength to stand our ground.

I placed my heart in your hands,
Where it felt safe and at home.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Anesthesia






I am awakened before 6a.m. by a nurse, who tells me it’s time to  have my Proviodine bath prior to surgery. I have only slept a few hours because of anxiety and weird hospital noises, despite the sleeping pills, which are dispensed like candy. My aluminum crutches seem to be making an awful racket in the still deserted hallway of cold tile. The nurse has left me towels, wash cloth and a bottle of that orange, sticky disinfectant that looks and smells like old cough syrup. I scrub from head to toe, as I did last night in the hospital shower. My hair is going to look like hell tomorrow, but that’s the least of my worries.
The tub-room looks out over the frozen city. Dawn has not yet crept over the January streets of Montreal. I imagine all the workers trudging through the slush on the dark streets down below, as I had done too only days before. The warmth of the water is reassuring, and I would like nothing better than to float awhile longer, but other patients need their bath too. I happen to be first on the hit-list.
Now I have an hour and a half to count down. If I could at least eat something it might help to pass the time, but I must be fasting. So I just stare at a crossword puzzle for most of the wait, pencil poised for action but hand remaining still.
The blue hospital gown they have given me is too small. It must belong to an eight-year-old. Experience has taught me how to tie these ridiculous open-back gowns so that my ass doesn’t show, but there is nothing I can do about the length. Just don’t bend over!
Soon enough the O.R. gurney’s wheels are heading my way. The ward has forgotten to give me the Vallium they keep promising, though they remember to order me to pee, several times. I pretend to on the second and third requests, to please the nurses and for something to do. And away we go!
My stainless-steel chariot is parallel parked outside the operating theaters, along with all the other lucky contestants lined up. A nurse hands me a shower cap that matches her own. I ask her where she was when I really needed the headgear before my flea bath. I count the holes in the white ceiling tiles while eavesdropping on two boring and pretentious surgical residents scrubbing up at the pedal sink.
A nurse with a kind face notices my uncontrollable teeth chattering and gets me a blanket just out of the warmer. Steam is rising,yet I do not find it affords much comfort.
This was to be #6 of 9 surgeries, trying to fix the damage done in the first. This was the biggest, the most painful, most technically difficult with the most risk of complications, and hopefully the most life-transforming.
They would cut off the ends of the bones forming my right knee joint and replace the void with titanium metal and Teflon plastics. The leftovers of my skeleton would be added to those of cadavers to be ground into a cement-paste to patch up the living bones of cancer or accident victims in want of repair. Medicine has a sense of humor unto itself.
What if they cut off too much, the circular saw slips? What if I can feel the pounding of chisel and hammer? What if...?
I realize that both the temperature and anxiety are equally to blame for the teeth chattering.
What’s the hold up? I stretch my head backwards to scan the scene upside-down, like when I was a kid. “A kid is a baby goat”, my grade 2 teacher would say.
Once in the O.R., they transfer me to the operating table and strap me down with a seat belt. I laugh, nervously, and then they do too. Their faces are masked, only the windows to their souls show as they start an intravenous line in my hand. It takes two of them, as they have trouble due to my cold-constricted veins. Electrodes are attached to my chest and a blood-pressure cuff to my other arm.
I visually search the machines around me, praying that they don’t malfunction. I try searching the eyes of the scurrying staff, wondering if they are all competent. Did a romantic spat or a puking kid keep them from a restful sleep last night? Are they working a double shift? Did they graduate last in their class? Do any of them take the drugs they are supposed to inject into patients, ...? 
Off to “la-la land” for me, they say. Like a sleep without dreaming; no concept of time, just lost hours, forever.       
                                                                                                    


I spy the syringe lying on a stand nearby- I did not notice its preparation. I yearn to double-check the name and dose of the medication, but I’m bound and tethered. Too late... 
Like a curare dart, the sweet poison is injected into the i.v.. It  travels up the vein towards my heart, where it is pumped to the arteries and the capillaries beyond. I can feel it circulate. As it reaches the cells of my mouth I can taste the now familiar metallic-garlic taste, and it will soon be “lights-out”.
But something is different than the other times. Something is wrong. I think they have given me too much of the sleeping potion, I think they have given me the dosage for the 300-pound-man next in line. I struggle to tell them, but cannot speak for I am already paralyzed, though still conscious. I quickly resolve to die in peace; there is no point in wasting my last moments lamenting over it. What’s done is done. Just release...
I have the sensation that I am a falling tree, roots still gripping the soil, but my trunk is speeding faster and faster backwards towards the damp and dark rain-forest floor. I can hear the horrible crashing and splitting sounds as I shear the limbs off other trees around me on my trajectory to earth. They are screaming.
I am aware of the powerfulness of the destruction, but can feel none of it. My body is already down and frozen stiff, but my soul is suddenly slammed on its back, into unconsciousness. Bitter-sweet anesthesia.

Friday, September 16, 2011

Screwed (and Tattooed)

Jesus was nailed
but I’m screwed to my cross.

Screws have threads that bite
and hold the bone.  
Stripped now are the heads;

the metal has become my own.                   

Fixated on primitive defenses,
body confused, knows not what it needs.
Too weak to ever conquer metal and plastic,
on the bone itself, it feeds.

Corrosion stains surrounding tissue black
while monocyte soldiers fight
to turn perceived enemies back.

Joints that are healthy are rarely even felt
but ache and complain miserably
when they begin to grind and melt.

A quagmire,
no solid place to bear the load.
The weight of a life lived well;
I’m screwed, trying to walk this slippery, shifting road.

Red rose was planted to cover the spot
an attempt to grow beauty, to hide the rot.
But beauty existed before the petals,
before the scars and screws;
before the thorns and metals.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Blue and Green


Sky so blue, so clear
Wind crisp and light
The trees dance with the sunshine
Swaying with green delight.          
Or is it a constant fear of
Falling apart in a storm 
That makes them tremble with fright ?
Your two skies are a moody blue,
Like the calm river surface
With the murderous current beneath
They gaze upon me, with love? concern? affection?
See me, and feel our unique connection
I can only know my skies from the inside
Looking out. But I like what I see.
Monocular vision they say
Flat and one-dimensional , like
These words I lay on the page.
With much love? concern? affection?
Growing stronger with age.
Our roots run long and reach deep,
These trees and you & I.
Don’t want to have to say goodbye.
Let’s weather the storms together
With much love, concern, affection.

p.s. Je t’aime toujours


Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Just Breathe

My boys, Simon and Will, started back to school this week after a quiet and uneventful summer. Friday night after supper I thought we could go get some ice-cream as a treat.

While I cleaned up the kitchen, my husband was relaxing and watching the news, after a full week of frustration at a job that does not deserve his many talents.

The kids had been playing outside, riding their bikes and scooters, hide-and-seek, frisbee, whatever ; trying to squeeze the last delicious drops out of summer.  When I went to get them, however, the street was now deserted. I asked their father if they had asked permission to go to the park or to a friend's house, but he said they had not.

So I set out for a walk around the neighborhood to find them, thinking at each corner I would meet them, or hear them laughing down the bike path, or spy them across the soccer field at the park, playing on the jungle-gym. No such luck.

Meanwhile, as I had been out looking for about 45 minutes, my husband was calling around to 4 friend's places, but the kids were not there either, and there was no answer at the 4th house. It was starting to get dark.

We got in the car to go search some more. We left a note and told the girl next door that if the boys returned, we wanted them to stay put.  Anyway, after driving around a bit frantic in the dark, and getting more worried and angry at the same time, and stopping people to ask if they saw the 2 little freaks, we returned home, relieved to find them standing on the corner waiting for us.

The oldest, 11, was crying and saying  how sorry he was. The youngest, 8, was trying to blame his "big brother", who is actually about 6 inches shorter than "little brother". Apparently, each thought the other had came to tell us they were going with a buddy who had arrived on his bike, unbeknownst to us, and whom we had not thought of calling. This friend has Asperger's syndrome, and thus does not always have the best judgement in social interactions.
A good lesson on clear communication for all involved; something we parents are still working on.


The real problem is that our oldest has Duchenne muscular dystrophy, a degenerative disease that will progressively see him become a quadrapalegic as each muscle of his little body gives up. We try to balance Simon's current sense of freedom and respons(ability) with his safety.  We want him to experience these thrilling moments of adventure while he still can, as one day he will surely be dependent on others for every activity of life.

All the talk in Buddhism about breathing makes me laugh with the irony, as Simon will most likely have to make the decision to be hooked to a respirator in order to continue living into his 20’s, his very manhood.  

Just breathe ... indeed.

I don't tell our story to make anybody cry, as I rarely do myself (anymore), or for sympathy. It just puts things into perspective for me, and helps me to think about others who are struggling in all the multitude of ways possible. I think my husband and I have always been the type rooting for the under-dogs of this world.

I worry that Simon won't experience the great joys of life, like the love of a romantic partner, getting his driver's license, or being a father to his own kids. I am scared of rejection by his peers, not feeling like a worthy member of society, unemployment, depression, etc. You name it, I worry about it. That's just my Mother Nature, for both these children who had to be cut out of my body in order to be given up to this world.

At the same time, it allows me to appreciate the immediate little joys of the everyday, like learning to ride a bike without training wheels, or listening to him laugh his uncontrollable and infectious laugh at a silly movie or at Jackass stunts, or enjoying a tasty peach with the juice running off his elbows. As nasty as his disease is, I feel it is important for him to know about the hardships others face, such as drought and famine, abuse, accidents, illness, war... Maybe we go overboard sometimes. I know I go overboard sometimes.

We are learning to "not sweat the small stuff", or trying, anyway. We are all stumbling, falling and getting back up to expose our bruises to the next punch that life throws our way.

I find that breathing gives me the time needed to find my patience. Somedays it is really buried deep. And I agree with my poet friend John O. , that it's easier at times to have patience for other people's children than it is for our own, I guess due to expectations and how it reflects back on us.

Just breathe...

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Tired

I am tired of it.
This life, this day.
Fess up ? Shut up.
Fed up ? Throw up.
Projectile puke this weariness
From my core.
Limbs leaden, mind is mud
Yet sleep still exhaustingly illusive.
Eyes involuntarily fluttering
Like a butterfly in a fan.
Sounds never sensed, auditory tricks,
Startling resistance awake.
Pleading for waves of warmth
To lap over me.
Sweet dreams please carry me home,
Away from this shore, this view.
I am tired of it,
Can't stand (it) anymore.
Tonight's glass half empty will be
Tomorrow's half full.
So tired.

Friday, August 12, 2011

Spooning Leads to Forking


You cop a feel while I load the washer
with your stinky socks and boxers.
You  grab my ass when I scrub the thrones
of the urine dribbled by the  Y chromosomes.
You point to your  crotch to let me know
of  yet another fabulous erection sure to curl my toes.
Sweetheart, I do enjoy what lies beneath
but for God’s sake brush your teeth.
A little respect dear, please,
if you want me on my knees
admiring your member.
At least try to remember
our anniversary is the 4th of September.
Okay ? Alright ?
If I’ve just held a puking child in the night
or  picked up the dog shit from the lawn
then it’s a good bet , moron,
that right then I don’t feel like making love
until I’ve had a shower with my favorite Dove.
But, Darling, if you give me 20 minutes to unwind
then sensual thoughts will come to mind.
Nuzzle my neck, kiss my thighs
the pleasure bubbles begin to rise,
like champagne at the uncorking.
You know, Sweety,
Our spooning always leads to forking.

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Off The List

Off the list
No more parties for you
Unfriended, blocked, unwelcome

A subtle rejection
Quiet and sneaky, perhaps
Why declare it with words?
Better to play it safe
Fly under the radar
It's not like you were UN-INVITED
The possibility of inclusion never even existed
There were no expectations to dash
No feelings to hurt, now were there?

If you had just conformed to the herd
Went along with the sheep instead
But you were a mere lamb, and a lame one at that 
You needed slaughtering
It had to be done, you see
For you were born of the dark ewe
And the ram with the broken prongs.
Foolish of them really
To think they could hide you from the sacrifice.

Don't take it personally, though
No offense intended
Just know that you will not see your name
On the list, ever again.


Party on!

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Precious Quick-sand


Shins dotted purple and blue
With bruises of variable hue
Gastrocnemius swollen tight
AnkleFootOrthotics strapped on every night
Tummy out, shoulders thrown back
Waddling  like a penguin white and black
Balance is off, appetite is not
Damned Deflazacort  and that cake Grandma brought
Joyous green eyes, messy golden hair
Oh this is so not fair
Little brother is taller and runs so fast
There are not as many friends as in the past
Wheelchairs and scooters are only cool for awhile
Nowhere to hide, no more denial
« Duchenne » it says on the file
 
Hold on tight to my hand   
As we journey across this quick-sand
A beautiful life these 11 precious years
Both bliss and pain bring colorless tears
                          

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Gimp

I limp when I walk

Or is it walk while I limp. Same diff Gimp.

I tell myself that I enjoy going slower, for I notice things others don’t.
Things like my frost bitten thumb, numb against the frozen metal of the cane. Awareness?

Or the sound my full Coke makes as it slides off the McDonald’s tray in slow motion and spills all over the floor because I could not perform the balancing act required,  but thought I could.  Not the first time I have misjudged my abilities, and won’t be the last. Not the first time I have gone thirsty either.

And because I cannot escape the absurd scene quick enough because someone has just washed the slippery tile floor, I get to hear the half-wit who works there berating me, as though I have made a mess and a fool of myself on purpose. Now I am limping and embarrassed.

My hands are shaking and I might puke.

I won’t share this part of my day with the family at the supper table.

Jan.30, 2011

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Good Intentions

I grew up next to my grandparent's dairy farm until I was 5, and my grandma kept chickens and sold eggs. She was a great strong lady, and I hold fond memories of those days. I just loved to spend time with her in the kitchen while she was baking, and she would sing all kinds of songs that no one else seemed to know. When she died the other grandchildren divvied up her valuables, but I asked for her mixing bowls. No better inheritance than that!

One of my most horrible memories is also of her. I was about 3 and she and I were coming into the farmhouse from the barn. I dashed up the stairs and slipped quickly out of my rubber boots. I turned and glanced over one shoulder and was surprised that I could not see my Gramma, as she had been right behind me. I decided that she must have stopped to pat the dog or take a few dry dish towels off the clothes line. Well, I also knew that I should shut the door from the porch to the house as quickly as possible to keep any flies out. Being an obedient child I slammed it with gusto.

There was a sickening crunch and then the cry of pain. Gramma had been right behind me, but had crouched down behind the door and had steadied herself to take off her boots. Her fingers had slipped into the open door frame and I had slammed the door shut across her knuckles.  I don't know who cried harder, Gramma in pain with her hand all bloody under the cold running water or me in utter shame.

Death Dream 2011



I just woke up in the middle of the night. Woke gently, but slightly bewildered.

Then, I was immediately overcome with the awareness that I was in a hospital and it was a nurse who had come to softly shake me from sleep. I could feel that institutional stifling warmth and could hear the beeping and whirring of machines and monitors, could smell the clean linens on the bed.

She told me that it was over now, that he was gone.
I had dared to fall asleep on my child's death vigil.

I looked up and could scarcely believe that the beautiful soul called Simon, my baby boy, was gone while I slept with my head resting against his side, my hand on his.

I had expected some feeling of relief when "it" finally came, but all I felt was utter grief. Disbelief, that I was left to walk my time on this Earth without his presence. Did time really exist before he was born?
The weight of the unfairness of it all was crushing my chest. Why him instead of me?

I lay beside my husband who was faintly snoring in the darkness, unaware of the sad puddle of a woman to his right.
I still had tears streaming down my face as I snuck into the boy's rooms to check on them like when they were babies. Simon was softly snoring, just like his father, and had a little grin on his face. Will was muttering in his dreams of adventure.

I have not been able to sleep soundly since this "awake dream". I look and feel like hell. At least the sun is shining bright today. I will put on sunglasses, walk the dog and try to experience my sadness, so that I may let it go, instead of burying it. Wish me luck.
Peace to all.




Caustic March

Here, a spring snow falls and covers the rubble.
It's probably the frozen version of acid rain
but it looks innocuous enough.
Certainly wouldn't be the first time
that I've been fooled by such stuff.

How Come?

Day after day
They passed over
The spot where she lay,
Unknown.
Lost but not forgotten,
Taken but not forsaken.
Alone, dreading the phone,
The call to end it all.                              
But there was no relief
When it came.
No lessening of grief
With her name.
Gone, gone.
It had gone all wrong.
So fast her life had passed,
So long they longed
For answers that would not come.
How come ?

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Birth Right

Drop the pretense
Stop the defense
Quit searching for another
I am here, mother.
Certainly not what you expected
Perhaps you feel disrespected.
You cannot rescind my birth
You bared this curse.
But like the phoenix
This child is resurrected.
Timid and reserved you say
Taught to be that way
By the distance in your judging grin
By not standing up to him.
When we ached for a hug
Invariably that hope was quashed like a bug.
Emotions are for others
Not for daughters and their brothers.
Never good enough
Well I for one have had enough.
It's too late to atone
Just leave me the fuck alone
To live my life
Where love is rife
And freely shown.
That is our birth right.