Submit your work, meet writers and drop the ads. Become a member
 
allison Jul 2014
After Pamela Sutton’s “Forty”

Since when are words lost, numbers dominating?
Until today, it was vernacular, not mathematics.
All changed at 18
when numbers engulfed my life like a tsunami.
1 life.
1 drive to school, traffic on the 405, 25 minutes;
10-minute parking; first class at 8.
8 dollars per hour x 3 day work week = no shopping.
Under my parents’ life insurance,
for now.
One life.
One dream of commencement, a sea of black and gold;
students as adults, graduating, growing up,
careers: the only things that matter now.
One dream of wheeling a patient into the OR
and he grasps my hand.
One saved life.
66 specialties for a nurse.
8 stories in CHOC Hospital;
279 beds.
One goal for everyone; nurses, patients, families—
disease-free, healthy.
One hospital specializing in children;
one in Orange, thousands of facilities.
One late night in Riverside the kitchen fluorescents
slowly brings the eyes of two, one father, one daughter,
to a close.
58 notecards, handwriting messy and smudged.
12 prefixes, 37 roots, 9 suffixes.
44 years: 1 student: Dad.
The point where my future was clear.
One goal, one career,
one life.
The subtle hum of the white lights lulls us to sleep
as the room slowly darkens.

September 2013
allison Jul 2014
The air is thick, words stick to my throat like tape.
The house, filled with objects taken for granted, feels empty.
Nothing’s out of place, except
                                        my balance

The picture frames, lined with silver, glint in the light.
The laughs of past memories echo, haunting the silence.
Nothing’s out of place, except
                                       our happiness

The corners of our cerulean couches are torn,
Broken by the claws of Chip and Cookie.
Nothing’s out of place, except
                                       their home

Justin and his chunky legs run back up the stairs,
Oblivious to the change coming for us.

*September 27, 2013 5:47:50 PM

— The End —