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When I look at your photograph, my son, there beside my bed, the one of you in dark suit and glasses, dressed as a Blues Brother for the work's Christmas party gig, I have to smile, yet at the same time hold back the tears, as days become weeks and weeks become months and months years, since your untimely death soon after. Silent now the jubilation, rare the celebration, low key if at all the laughter. The only photograph where you're not smiling, where you stare back in fixed unsmiling mode, as if you had some inner clue or foresight of your fate one month ahead when you would be no longer here, but dead.
0
Jul 21, 2017
Jul 21, 2017 at 4:37 AM UTC
YOUR PHOTO MY SON.
When I look at your photograph, my son, there beside my bed, the one of you in dark suit and glasses, dressed as a Blues Brother for the work's Christmas party gig, I have to smile, yet at the same time hold back the tears, as days become weeks and weeks become months and months years, since your untimely death soon after. Silent now the jubilation, rare the celebration, low key if at all the laughter. The only photograph where you're not smiling, where you stare back in fixed unsmiling mode, as if you had some inner clue or foresight of your fate one month ahead when you would be no longer here, but dead.
A father talks to his dead son.
TerryCollett
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Jul 21, 2017
Jul 21, 2017 at 4:37 AM UTC
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