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Archive for October, 2021

That’s the secret, love. It’s not about finding what you’re searching for…it’s about valuing what you find. (Reed Logan Westgate, The Infernal Games)

Time. I find so little of it lately. And yet, this poem, written four years ago, hits me as if I’d written it yesterday.

GENE’S WORDS—AT HIS OWN FUNERAL

My death started in January
when bare branches caressed snow
cold as my body.

My friend, the gentle priest,
stood at one end of the casket
and asked if he blessed my head or feet.

He didn’t know I laughed, hearing him
from the gnarled branches of a nearby tree,
where a bright, red cardinal and I

waited to fly together into new,
exciting places I would never be able
to explain to those left behind.

The priest had commented on my raucous
sense of humor. He paused, memory or imagination
filling in the blanks. Church space remained

reverent. Stifled laughs warmed my spirit, the chill 
of my body left behind. My eulogist spoke
about schizophrenia, paranoia. I carried 
 
the burden and pain. My friend said I 
was not my diagnosis. He mentioned
common moments. Coffee, killer cigarettes, picnics,

my volatile, unstable movements
as if they had been claps of thunder
during a hymn. Something that happens,

and can be embraced as part of a larger whole.
A woman reached one arm around her husband.
Their son held his infant daughter. I carried

the baby’s father as an infant. My cardinal 
companion flew upward. I followed.
A voice came from a light breaking through

the winter gray.  Your fear has been buried.
Come. I had never heard the voice.
Yet, I knew death had ended, a new life begun.

pic made from public domain photo and pastels

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Oxford trail sun through trees

Age is of no importance unless you’re a cheese.  (Billie Burke)

 As my husband and I walk hand-in-hand along a park path, two younger women say that we look like a cute couple. Yup, we’ve been recognized as nursing-home candidates. Cute is reserved for the opposite ends of the age spectrum. Youngsters and oldsters.

We are in our mid-seventies. However, the spirit I carry inside is confused by the image I see in the bathroom mirror. The loose skin and sagging neck. The inner self gathers both pain and joy. It grows. Its form is not visible.

 I can always learn something new. About the world and about this red-haired individual I call me. Someone I love was in the hospital recently. The experience stole more energy than I expected. I am coming back.

 A cobalt blue sky speaks healing. The deeper kind. The kind that tells me to hold on when rain and storms break through.

 “I’m celebrating you today,” I tell my husband. It is his birthday. I appreciate a mate who loves me as I am. Presents and cakes don’t matter as much anymore. However, this living moment matters far more.

 

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The greatest gifts you can give your children are the roots of responsibility and the wings of independence. (Denis Waitley)
Corner kick. Forward. Goal.
Thirty minutes to run, compete, score,
in an ordinary soccer game.

Yet these are TOPSoccer kids, 
who identify their teams
with different-colored uniforms.

While their goals wear 
shared energy. All players pause
as a girl with a walker

reaches for a short kick.
Then a comrade on her team 
assists to score a goal.

Kids with special needs 
become more than unique.
They are individuals with fresh skills. 

illustration made from photos, public domain pic, and colored paper


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playground

Children make your life important. (Erma Bombeck )

A metal bar on playground equipment can be as elusive as the top branch of a sequoia tree, to a child with Down syndrome. Low muscle tone affects movement. I watch as a more agile child edges Ella out. We are at an Oktoberfest. The adults roam the booths.

Ella sits on the ground and covers her eyes. I could go to her and be an even bigger child at play. An unspoken protector. However, Ella needs interaction with peers. I wait. And hope.

A girl with thick, kinky curls stops where Ella sits. I don’t hear their conversation. I’m not included. My granddaughter follows her new friend through the maze of kids and metal. The other girl calls her by name. Ella smiles.

The other girl is more agile. Yet, she doesn’t appear to show off her skills. She leads Ella through what she can maneuver. For another half hour. Until I see the girl stop and raise her hand toward someone behind me. “Okay. I’m coming, Daddy.”

She needs to go home. To join her family. A family already displaying the importance of getting along. I don’t turn to see either parent. I take a picture in my mind of a girl with light brown skin, dark hair. The beauty of black and white joined. And a gift I hope to pass along in a few short paragraphs.

Peace in mini doses.

 

pic created from public domain photo and colored paper

 

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