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J R Cramer Nov 2018
I remember sitting
On the tiny porch
Of my dad’s home
Offended by the sun
That continued to sink and set
Without pausing to acknowledge
My dad’s passing.
Offended by the cars
That continued on the highway;
Callous indifference, it seemed to me.
Even the birds at their feeder
Greedily fed and failed to look up
To mark the loss of their benefactor.

I found myself
Silently demanding condolences
In every encounter.
Not for the sympathy,
Or worse, pity,
But for the acknowledgement
That he was here
And now he’s gone,
And something,
However infinitesimally small
In the scopeless universe,
Has changed.

I have two cousins.
The first called my dad
Every month.
His regular call came
During the last days.
The decline surprised him.
He took a deep breath
And asked for speakerphone
Near my dad.
He told my dad
How much my dad had
Influenced his life;
How as a child,
he anticipated a visit from my dad
Like kids stay up to see Santa;
How my dad made my cousin feel
Like he was the most important kid
In the wide world;

How my dad gave my cousin
The otherwise unavailable
Sustenance of heart
Young boys need;
How my cousin had strived to be
Like my dad
And how he hoped
His own children see in him
What he saw in my dad.

That was acknowledgement,
Profound acknowledgement.

My second cousin called
Shortly after the first.
He had heard
That my dad was dying.
He did not ask
To speak with my dad.
He wanted to tell me
To call him
As soon as memorial
Arrangements were made
So that he could purchase
Discounted airline tickets,
To include a subsequent visit
To his son who lives
In the southern part of the state.

My dad was still living.

That, too, acknowledged something,
And served to impel my pending decision.
So I opted for
A less conventional
Memorial ritual
That required neither
Plane tickets nor attendance
Nor a frozen smile reception.

I would not suffer
Insincere acknowledgement.

I am sure I scandalized
Many acquaintances of my dad
Who enjoyed the social conventions of
The anticipated gathering
If only to point out the deficiencies
Of the event and the host.

I am sure I offended
And frustrated
And embittered
One of my cousins.

The other cousin thought
My dad would have preferred
Sincerity
Over a pantomime.

I would suffer
The disfavor and distaste
Of the discontented
With no difficulty.
I’ve been feeling so much
That only the touch
Of one saint as such
Jesus could save me

I am not religious by any
Means it’s just analogies
It’s funny this feeble
Season that mingles
My feeling so little

Into something less fragile
Like cheese made from milk
Worm ***** and silk
Or whatever there is
That suits up your ships

I’ve been running from feeling
But that’s where the healing
Seems to be found
And I am quite proud
So I’ve been quite loud
In prolonging the frown

And I’ve been holding my foot
On this nail yet no root
Seems to take place
Or some divine grace
To appear by my feet
I guess I must meet

Myself where I am
And grief yesterday
If I can’t alone may
Therapy help me

Or a friend if there’s any

Preferably both

So all this depression
Turns into expression
Not to be rid of
But to feel it belongs
And is safe to be
As long as it needs
And then it will leave

By it’s own volition

But that’s not my mission

For tears are a must
If you ever put trust
In something you believed
And it brought in the grief
Of the hopes dead with it

I will grief it all
Between the ***** and the ****
And the drugs and night outs
And it might take a while
To relearn how to smile

It might take forever
But I won’t know if i never
Get out of my head
And say the word ”help”
Cause I’ll die of regret
If I go like this yet
Never pray that I’ll land
Wherever I'm meant
And take the first step
To where I see life
Forgive all the strife
And become less ****
Myself too with it

Thank God that I lived
With enough honesty
To have something to grief
So passionately
Again, not religious, just using the saying
How else could say that I'm always praying
That I'll see what's tomorrow
Beyond this deep sorrow
And this feeling so hollow
How else to keep faith
To not fall in my grave
When it's all feeling hopeless
And endlessly scopeless

Maybe you can't tell
I am not doing well
I hurt a lot now
Because I somehow
Managed to live
Just how my heart dreamed
And now I landed
So my knees hurt a bit
Bit lost and in need
Of help for a grip
On the kindness I seek
In me, it's not lit
So a lantern would fit
At least a matchstick
IF at all anything

Maybe you can't tell
Ever since I fell
It has been some time
But I know, I'll be fine,
I'll take me a while
To let go of denial
And get through the mire
After all, it's hellfire
I'm learning to feel
But It's all part of grief,
It's all part of life

This Suffering and pain and strife
The stars, the moon, the skies and sun
They're all aspects of this "one"
That this poem calls a God
Or Nirvana, Universe
They are all words wrote in the verse
Of living life through your own lens
There wouldn't be as much suspense
Without the heavier chapters
Sad, or mad or sea or stone
They all beat being monotone

So while it hurts and brings much dread
I do accept that love is dead
In the shape it used to have
And it is not coming back
In my life on the same track

To my surprise it's not that fun
When black holes consume the sun
But something I've come to believe
Is that they don't call it "good grief"
For nothing now...)))
Onwards I row, onwards...
Somehow

_M.

— The End —