It's been a long day. You died so soon ago and we notice your noise is gone, the parakeets and me. You should comment somehow on the oddness of things since your disease.
The paranoia and lies the dementia played made your dreams seem like waking and your sleep tore into
you with fantasies and confusion. You shouldered the nurses by telling them you felt fine. That lie pushed you to more agitaton.
I never knew you would get well. I was cursed with a colder reality. As I drove to see you in the cocoon of the nursing home I wondered would you be crying or well.
It was the crying I never unfolded. in your room where we so carefully braided the colors to your whims. The colors are the same today.
Now wilted, the bright sun's rays like the daylight dim but your harsh yellow teeth spread around my name and you saw me beaten and unforgiven
You took me with you to the Hell of brass urns. I thought to ask you why but the look on your framed face said you were waiting and your yellow grin dared me to be quiet.
I saw the years in stark isolation. You in a painted slicker, I knew you loved me once and briefly. Your journey was a long one. Mine is
to shower daily your burnt name across the yellow ******* of