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Where you sat to wait out the seasons In your maple chair, tucked in the corner Born from smoke and dried lavender, Old photographs and dusty necklaces Stained the tablecloth with your empty smiles Puffed out smoke, eyes wide out the window Half asleep at the table in your blue bathrobe Buried in notebooks of days past, In a silence of summer mornings And hazy afternoons in bed. And that your breath was like acid, It still stains me today and Your words were as sweet- When you emptied those bottles. Still, you loved like no other Could Devise. Summer nights, beer, angry phone calls- Where I slept and knew not What is was you did, or why it was wrong But when the police came, I still hid under the coffee table. A young child's world tossing and turning Constant, like seas that grow with rain. Your warm presence, Easing eyes, thick hair, soft words The all encompassing memory that sings "Mother" In a delicate drawl like lace on the backs of brides. Where I sat and we laughed over daily things And you'd tell me about your new friend The bird that you saw, what you'd drawn Each day you reminded me of your dreams for us, We'd rise out of this hole "Twelve days", you'd said in dark You would heal, no more medicines or therapies, and you might have been on your way there. Where your body draped over the toilet Fourty-five coursing through your veins Lungs struggling to grasp air, Arms went limp and neck grew cold Did you regret the decision you had made? Darling mother. Where I stood in the door frame And gazed over your lifeless body, Paralyzed in fear Stumbled to the trees to hear my mind's calm To escape the screaming of Too young Too old, at one tragic time Quivering to check your wrists for some jumping pulse But only a deep stillness sat over you, Froze you in time. And still frozen in my memory you sit, Somewhere between where moments turn to memory And where lifetimes turn to fiction. Do not worry, mother. When you left, you did not leave ashes But a gaping pit that requires the strength of an army to fill And the courage of a millennium to even admit it's there. For everything you lacked, it was a gift. To that same seven year old that hid In a midnight hallway across a despairing wreck of a mother And taught her to hold on.
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Dec 1, 2014
Dec 1, 2014 at 9:20 PM UTC
Mother
Where you sat to wait out the seasons In your maple chair, tucked in the corner Born from smoke and dried lavender, Old photographs and dusty necklaces Stained the tablecloth with your empty smiles Puffed out smoke, eyes wide out the window Half asleep at the table in your blue bathrobe Buried in notebooks of days past, In a silence of summer mornings And hazy afternoons in bed. And that your breath was like acid, It still stains me today and Your words were as sweet- When you emptied those bottles. Still, you loved like no other Could Devise. Summer nights, beer, angry phone calls- Where I slept and knew not What is was you did, or why it was wrong But when the police came, I still hid under the coffee table. A young child's world tossing and turning Constant, like seas that grow with rain. Your warm presence, Easing eyes, thick hair, soft words The all encompassing memory that sings "Mother" In a delicate drawl like lace on the backs of brides. Where I sat and we laughed over daily things And you'd tell me about your new friend The bird that you saw, what you'd drawn Each day you reminded me of your dreams for us, We'd rise out of this hole "Twelve days", you'd said in dark You would heal, no more medicines or therapies, and you might have been on your way there. Where your body draped over the toilet Fourty-five coursing through your veins Lungs struggling to grasp air, Arms went limp and neck grew cold Did you regret the decision you had made? Darling mother. Where I stood in the door frame And gazed over your lifeless body, Paralyzed in fear Stumbled to the trees to hear my mind's calm To escape the screaming of Too young Too old, at one tragic time Quivering to check your wrists for some jumping pulse But only a deep stillness sat over you, Froze you in time. And still frozen in my memory you sit, Somewhere between where moments turn to memory And where lifetimes turn to fiction. Do not worry, mother. When you left, you did not leave ashes But a gaping pit that requires the strength of an army to fill And the courage of a millennium to even admit it's there. For everything you lacked, it was a gift. To that same seven year old that hid In a midnight hallway across a despairing wreck of a mother And taught her to hold on.
Mother (in time and place) for my mother, who as I speak, looks down on me as I live her memory here on earth. In memory of her beauty and tragedy
somewhat-sara
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Dec 1, 2014
Dec 1, 2014 at 9:20 PM UTC
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