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Marc Morais Mar 22
If someone made you cry when they were near,
and again when they left—
then run after them.

Make them laugh—
watch the way their face lights up,
how their body remembers your presence.

If they stop laughing and start to cry
then, you’ve found something special—
a reason to stay.
Thank you Dublin
for making me honest and simple
and pure
left you behind
a hundred years ago
but thank you Dublin
thank you for taking the trouble
to teach me what
decent people do
thank you for reminding me
what my father would do
thank you for giving me
the gift of the gab
thank you for all
the Irish jab
thank you for
my mam and dad
thank you for staying with me
after all these years
thank you Dublin
I miss you
and I will see you very soon!
  Mar 22 Marc Morais
Christian
Feet reclined near water's edge,
the warmth of the Sun,
coolness of the breeze,
Hmm...a little yellow flower.

Standing all alone,
so small,
so proud,
so beautiful.

For a moment I'm reminded of you,
I shall pluck it for your enjoyment!
But wait- maybe instead,
I should leave it alone.

Yes, I'll leave it where it be,
so I can return each day,
and have a pleasant reminder of you.

Perhaps I'll write about it,
maybe in a letter,
and send it to you,
immortalizing its brilliance,
the little yellow flower.
Marc Morais Mar 22
The moss stretches thin
across the arms of trees,
clinging the way a chill
catches at the back of a neck.
The pinch before darkness thickens—
I, too,
feel the night settle,
and drape myself
in shadow.

No one asks—
why the sky rests in my chest,
why I lean toward the dark,
why the trees bend closer
each limb bracing
against the silence I carry.

The night knows—
it tightens its hands
around the quiet in me,
kindles something small,
lets it smolder
before swallowing me in.

This is how it feels—
to belong
to something
that will not speak
to kneel before silence
that will never answer back.
Marc Morais Mar 22
I have been listening to the same song
over and over again
for the past five days,
trying to calm my body down—
some smooth and quiet song
with barely any lyrics.

It is not working.

My body has a quarrel
with being hit by comets
three times in the same week.

My son took forever to answer his phone.

'Dad, Mom has stage three cancer.
Is that bad'

I paused a few seconds—
the way you try to tidy up a room
as you go to answer the door
to an unexpected guest.

'Do you think it’s bad, Dad, do you'—

'We will just have to wait and see.'

But I know it’s bad.

I am stuck in a play
written by Albert Camus,
and I am the main character
called Spooky.

My mother died from stomach cancer.
I survived it.
And now my ex is stuck holding the bag—
what are the odds.

And it’s bad—
it’s about closure,
about not saying your lines
when the play was on,
not about rehearsing years after
and trying to land all your marks
now that it is too late.

It’s about how I had to say farewell
to my son before my operation
because he couldn’t follow me
to the hospital—
COVID lockdown.

It’s about giving closure
when it’s due.

It’s about how my ex ended up
with the stomach cancer I had,
with the same oncologist I had,
the same surgeon I had,
recovering in the same room
where I recovered—
what are the odds, the ******* odds.

It’s about how my son lay on a mat
next to his mom, calling me every night
for some comforting words,
while my ghost sat in a big red chair,
watching over them from that same room.

It’s about how she called me
to ask for forgiveness
for throwing me down a staircase.

[...]

I told her to rest,
to take care of herself—
that it was okay.

I am not much of a liar,
but I have a **** good bedside manner.

I sent her a poem about forgiveness.
She texted back saying I should publish.

The last time I published
was the same year
she threw me down the staircase
and said my poetry was toiletry.

Tomorrow—
I will take the mirror down the staircase
and put it on top instead.

I will take off all the tribal
and war masks along the wall,
replace them with pictures of my son,
and call it 'My Son Climbing the Years.'

I will send her a bouquet of violets and daisies
a bouquet of having faith in a new beginning
I will leave my son and his mom
the house for the summer,
they can enjoy the river and the valley together.

My mother would have liked that—not the house part
how I can let her rest and find closure.
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