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The wind used to howl, but now it only cries. The poignant sting of snow used to ambush my eyes. With Fall and Winter in a blur all year is Summer and Spring. I used to walk, walk with you be pushed in a kiddie swing. The geese were more afraid of me than I was ever of them. Oh, Memére, how I miss the days together we would spend. The sun still scorches, but not as sweet, as clouded with young eyes You can’t compare a tropic spring to dusted Autumn skies. The pumpkins red, lit up at night, would glow upon your face. In winter, every snowflake seemed to find its perfect place- upon your window, lit up with care, those glowing, plastic candles. They’ve faded as the years have passed, like sun-bleached, light-pink, sandles. You’ve been lost, like an age-pulled button. Your stings have not held, Your mind forgotten. So I dig, I dig, through your sewing kit, to stitch you back together. At least for my own memory, so I can remember forever. Somehow I’m not as nimble, somehow just not as quick. I couldn’t find the seamstress in me once you’d fallen sick. I pump, I pump the metal petal, to piece you back together. That button used so many times in deadly, freezing, weather. Somehow you slipped, not just through my fingers, but in a dreadful way, where the soul seldom lingers. You just got worse I cried to find that stinking button that was on my mind. The final piece that would solve the puzzle fix a confused mind, your struggle. Now I see, now that you’re gone, that I had had it all along. The key, the clue, that wretched button. And then it hit me, all of a sudden. Those trembling geese, the Autumn skies, the snowflakes that had stung my eyes. Those things are all I really need to make sure your heart still beats. Your eyes, your chin, your soft, thin hair, all the answers were always there. Now whenever I miss you, these gems of memories, they pull me through.
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Aug 19, 2015
Aug 19, 2015 at 2:46 PM UTC
Her Buttons: a Tribute
The wind used to howl, but now it only cries. The poignant sting of snow used to ambush my eyes. With Fall and Winter in a blur all year is Summer and Spring. I used to walk, walk with you be pushed in a kiddie swing. The geese were more afraid of me than I was ever of them. Oh, Memére, how I miss the days together we would spend. The sun still scorches, but not as sweet, as clouded with young eyes You can’t compare a tropic spring to dusted Autumn skies. The pumpkins red, lit up at night, would glow upon your face. In winter, every snowflake seemed to find its perfect place- upon your window, lit up with care, those glowing, plastic candles. They’ve faded as the years have passed, like sun-bleached, light-pink, sandles. You’ve been lost, like an age-pulled button. Your stings have not held, Your mind forgotten. So I dig, I dig, through your sewing kit, to stitch you back together. At least for my own memory, so I can remember forever. Somehow I’m not as nimble, somehow just not as quick. I couldn’t find the seamstress in me once you’d fallen sick. I pump, I pump the metal petal, to piece you back together. That button used so many times in deadly, freezing, weather. Somehow you slipped, not just through my fingers, but in a dreadful way, where the soul seldom lingers. You just got worse I cried to find that stinking button that was on my mind. The final piece that would solve the puzzle fix a confused mind, your struggle. Now I see, now that you’re gone, that I had had it all along. The key, the clue, that wretched button. And then it hit me, all of a sudden. Those trembling geese, the Autumn skies, the snowflakes that had stung my eyes. Those things are all I really need to make sure your heart still beats. Your eyes, your chin, your soft, thin hair, all the answers were always there. Now whenever I miss you, these gems of memories, they pull me through.
In loving memory of Julie Michaud: a wife, mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, and talented seamstress whom we all loved dearly.
laurengmichaud
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Aug 19, 2015
Aug 19, 2015 at 2:46 PM UTC
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