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I’ve lost count of the weeks. Grief has made its own calendar. The pandemic stopped what ambition started I surrender. 4th March 2020: My mother has died I can't close my eyes tonight not because I am afraid of falling asleep but of waking up in a tomorrow where she does not exist. Behold, the audacity! I never accepted night, and still, the sun creeps up across the jagged Tokyo skyline ascending the tower ladder, bouncing off windows, pushing apart curtains pouring in from all crevices as the city flips up person by person, onto its stuporous hustle, as if nothing happened. ----------------------------------------- Amazing Grace: A million poems came to hold up my heart as it fell apart in my mother's death I had prepared for this moment, but what preparations suffice, when air is wrenched away from breath? I could write the saddest lines, sadder than Neruda's but the tales of her glory have a more engaging story to tell. What would she have said when she saw herself tagged in her obituary? she always counted the likes and read the comments I receive, rejoicing momentarily, in what, she claimed, was borrowed fame. And now I grieve. My frantic efforts to capture screenshots whenever we face-timed, so I could hoard her presence. Oh, bless her essence! even though her skin-clad bones had lost the cushion of flesh, even though the bruit of the fistula in her left arm terrified me like a constant 'low-battery' signal, when she managed to hug me, breathlessly, that last time, it was an exchange of the most amazing grace: her pain wrapped in patience, mine in gratitude. ----------------------------------------- Retrospective Realizations: And suddenly, I remember all the condolence messages I have ever written and retrospectively fill them with feel, only now revealed to me. My best compassion and empathy paled in comparison to this reality. Death is inevitable; mortality, inescapable. but life, with its enticing persistence to carry on, is cruel. ----------------------------------------- The poem ends but the pain doesn't: The real mourning starts when the visitors leave and the phone calls end and the messages stop pouring in, when you have to resume living but the dead can't un-die. Arshia. 22.4.2020 #onewritingaweek #weekunknown
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Apr 28, 2020
Apr 28, 2020 at 10:35 AM UTC
Never-Ending Ending
I’ve lost count of the weeks. Grief has made its own calendar. The pandemic stopped what ambition started I surrender. 4th March 2020: My mother has died I can't close my eyes tonight not because I am afraid of falling asleep but of waking up in a tomorrow where she does not exist. Behold, the audacity! I never accepted night, and still, the sun creeps up across the jagged Tokyo skyline ascending the tower ladder, bouncing off windows, pushing apart curtains pouring in from all crevices as the city flips up person by person, onto its stuporous hustle, as if nothing happened. ----------------------------------------- Amazing Grace: A million poems came to hold up my heart as it fell apart in my mother's death I had prepared for this moment, but what preparations suffice, when air is wrenched away from breath? I could write the saddest lines, sadder than Neruda's but the tales of her glory have a more engaging story to tell. What would she have said when she saw herself tagged in her obituary? she always counted the likes and read the comments I receive, rejoicing momentarily, in what, she claimed, was borrowed fame. And now I grieve. My frantic efforts to capture screenshots whenever we face-timed, so I could hoard her presence. Oh, bless her essence! even though her skin-clad bones had lost the cushion of flesh, even though the bruit of the fistula in her left arm terrified me like a constant 'low-battery' signal, when she managed to hug me, breathlessly, that last time, it was an exchange of the most amazing grace: her pain wrapped in patience, mine in gratitude. ----------------------------------------- Retrospective Realizations: And suddenly, I remember all the condolence messages I have ever written and retrospectively fill them with feel, only now revealed to me. My best compassion and empathy paled in comparison to this reality. Death is inevitable; mortality, inescapable. but life, with its enticing persistence to carry on, is cruel. ----------------------------------------- The poem ends but the pain doesn't: The real mourning starts when the visitors leave and the phone calls end and the messages stop pouring in, when you have to resume living but the dead can't un-die. Arshia. 22.4.2020 #onewritingaweek #weekunknown
arshia
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Apr 28, 2020
Apr 28, 2020 at 10:35 AM UTC
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