When I arrived home , I walked in the front door anxious to tell Gwen all about my interesting morning. Is it the emptiness of the house, or the quietness that first hits me? It's kind of like being in a Roadrunner cartoon. I come toa screeching halt, knowing that all I can do is wait for the rock that Wiley Coyote has alread pried loose to come crashing down on me. And it does. I've now learned that it is possible to go through life all flattened out like that.
The urn with Gwen's ashes is on the mantel. As I do each time I return to the house, I take a few minutes to talk with her and tell her about my day. Next to the urn, there's a picuture of our second wedded kiss. Now there's a poem waiting to be born:
IT’S JUST NOT RIGHT
Just when I think
thing are getting better
there’s a little reminder
that gets me whimpering
and whispering her name
and asking why.
Today it was
That picture of us
Kissing on the porch
Of the church in Gaastra
Right in front of God
And everybody
Just the thought
Of those warm, delicious lips
Excites me yet today
And I feel her wedding lace
Under my hands--
Know again what it celebrated.
The church in Gaastra
Has been moved to
The Iron County Museum
In Caspian.
The picture is on our mantel
Next to the crematorium urn.
The picture and the urn,
It’s still so hard
To comprehend
The meaning
Of those two
Artifacts.
John A. Bayerl, January 28, 2011
I wish I could say I remember that kiss. I don't, not exactly. What I do remember is that, after all those month of waiting, it was not a mere peck on the lips. Also, church or not, it was more than a kiss for the photographer. Much more.
1 comment:
"Our second wedded kiss" reminded me I also have a photo like that tucked away in our 41 year old wedding album. We had no money, so only a few photos were taken but that one was special. I'm pulling it out of the album this morning to add to my memorial shelf ... to join Vern's urn, the angel figurines we were given along the cancer journey and other special momentos. Thanks for bringing this special memory back to me, John.
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