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It is hard to see him now, frail body confined to the bed, a doll drained of stuffing beneath his blanket, topped with graying head. I cast aside the memory of a man I once knew: the man who wore his liver on his sleeve, the bottle before any woman, any job, any law; the man who told his young son they could drive anywhere as long as they spent no money; gas flowed from pumps like water; the town unfolding as we drive, an endless archive of stories untold before wide child eyes. The man who rose from bartender to janitor to professional, back to the bar and then, in a flash, this hospice bed; cruel arc of a careless life, a life unforgiving of mistakes, disease, and the great, great imperfections of men. I am too ingrained for him to forget, culled from the years erased, a memory plucked from the sea of fog; implanted too deep in his heart to dissolve into dementia’s ether; but too many memories have become unmoored, ropes dangling, anchor lost, drifting along the tides of time, listing with the waves in a silent good-bye.
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Oct 4, 2011
Oct 4, 2011 at 10:30 PM UTC
Father's Day
It is hard to see him now, frail body confined to the bed, a doll drained of stuffing beneath his blanket, topped with graying head. I cast aside the memory of a man I once knew: the man who wore his liver on his sleeve, the bottle before any woman, any job, any law; the man who told his young son they could drive anywhere as long as they spent no money; gas flowed from pumps like water; the town unfolding as we drive, an endless archive of stories untold before wide child eyes. The man who rose from bartender to janitor to professional, back to the bar and then, in a flash, this hospice bed; cruel arc of a careless life, a life unforgiving of mistakes, disease, and the great, great imperfections of men. I am too ingrained for him to forget, culled from the years erased, a memory plucked from the sea of fog; implanted too deep in his heart to dissolve into dementia’s ether; but too many memories have become unmoored, ropes dangling, anchor lost, drifting along the tides of time, listing with the waves in a silent good-bye.
Published in “deuce coupe,” Jan., 2011 http://deucecoupe.wordpress.com/ ©2011 – Dan Schell
dan-schell
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American
Oct 4, 2011
Oct 4, 2011 at 10:30 PM UTC
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