This is not my face
Or my feet or the flesh hanging off my frame
These are not the hands that
Touched your shoulder tenderly
The eyes that dared to eye your own
In front of your father
Are long gone.
Look at me; I am she!
I am the one she was
(If not a little bitter)
For the blisters from the churning return
And splinters hurt
But butter cannot heal.
And you, no wiser but delivered alone
To that dry place
Cracked and wry as my face has become
Goodbye my unrequited love
Goodbye, one so adored
Know that I am shrivelled and I am withered and where
Bares the mark of love on me?
Washed away a thousand times
The wine-stain has faded into the carpet
My grandson helped to wash.
Summer is passing for the last time.
I sit on a plastic chair on the lawn
Hearing again your sigh:
“This place is a far cry from paradise”
I laugh now, strong, real, bemused
My legs do not ache but I am tired
And slip, smiling
And touch your shoulder again.

Comments
threeleafshamrock | January 25, 2009 - 14:00
This has the makings of something really special. Love to see you return to this and extend it. It feels like there is a lot more to say and I'm nosy; I want the rest of the story. ;)
Chris X
anipani | June 3, 2009 - 14:17
strong voice, no-one feels their age, except in the sense that it limits them in their view of themselves, always in our minds the memory delights and confuses. (and deludes us)