3 Poems on Grief

Ache

 

The throbbing is deep –

Canyon wide –

Tears cut the gorge.

 

I scream

And the echo finds me

Right from where it was sent

 

I hope for a response

Mannequin still I stand

Hoping beyond hope

 

Just to hear him,

Even just to stand with him,

Again.

 

Alone, in a place

Called Hollow

I pitch my tent

 

And look over the vast expanse

Of the ache

That will never let me forget.

 

Wailing

 

I heard it first in Robin

The moment we received

The news

 

Of Tyler’s death.

She wailed.

The deep, gut-wrenching

 

Shrieks of agony.

I can hear them still

A pulsating memory.

 

It is not unusual

That we cry together

Or recount our individual

 

Trail of tears

Any given day

But this week

 

The wailing was my voice

Hearing the howling roar

Of my fulminating fury

 

Volcanic thunderstorm

Spewing, searing,

Scalding, scorching

 

Every thought or emotion

In its path.

After I recalled,

 

The subterranean hell

Cascading lava of

Schizophrenia Tyler lived with

 

Every

Single

Day.

 

There is no wailing without remembering.

 

Habitation

 

It has taken up residence

It inhabits my inmost being

It resides in my flesh

 

It beats in my brain

It crawls beneath my skin

It pulses in my blood

 

It waters my eyes

It twists my smile

It catches my breath

 

It usurps my thoughts

It screams in my emotions

It coerces my will

 

It is in my waking

It is in my laboring

It is in my sleeping

 

It is my grief

It is my life

It is my habitation.

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