FINAL ACTS
She awoke from her afternoon nap
and asked when we were going home.
We are home, I assured her
see, here’s our family picture, the TV,
the crystal bell from your folks’ 50th.
This time it was different.
No, she said, I’m at the train station
I’ll soon be going on a trip
Get my suitcase.
Oh, I said.
A little later she wanted to know
when we were leaving for the cemetery.
Cemetery? Whose funeral is it?
Mine, she replied.
Oh, I said again.
I couldn’t, or wouldn’t,
Or simply chose not to
Hear what she was telling me
In that final act of love.
On that sunny, early November afternoon,
I couldn’t imagine what lay ahead.
I remember everything she said
yet I never heard a word of it.
John A. Bayerl, January 22, 2011
And maybe it's OK that those of us who dare to love deeply prefer the anesthesia of denial to the cold comfort of knowing. I recently read a quote from Thomas Merton: "As soon as you know it, you no longer believe it, at least not in the same way as you know it." I marked the page where I found that quote with a marker that the funeral home provided. On it is the picture of Gwen with the happy smile and straw hat. Each time I move that bookmark I find that I have to kiss her picture. Maybe if I were to stop doing that I would have to stop believing something. I'm not sure what it is that I'm not ready to accept, what I am sure of is that I'm not ready to do it yet.
2 comments:
Your posts continue to have a connection for me, John, bringing back special memories on this 4 month anniversary since Vern's passing. He went directly from the hospital into hospice on a Friday evening. Since he had kidney failure my head knew we didn't have long - but my heart wasn't at all prepared for his passing Wednesday morning. Our 4+ year cancer battle did not prepare me at all.
Loved your poem and John, never ever stop kissing the photo of Gwen on your bookmark. This is a lovely way to keep her memory alive in your heart. Blessings.
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