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Sunday, December 9, 2018

Memories Elusive


there came a time
when memories flew
like leaves upon the wind
falling upon her quiet hours

~she plucked them, one by one ~

as over time they slowed, fading, almost gone,
she reaching for the last few
(ephemeral, drifting, elusive)
until they fell no more.


I tried my first puente for Marian's prompt at Real Toads - the middle line being a bridging thought for the two stanzas. Marian's example puente at Toads is spectacular! Ouch. I hope this poem is not prophetic. But my Grandma lived to be almost a hundred, with memories intact. We live in hope (not to live to a hundred, but to keep the memories.)




16 comments:

  1. The wintering of memory... Such a painful image, in the end.

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  2. This is simply beautiful. The way time softens the edges of memories, yes...

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  3. That first one is simply outstanding!❤️ Love the image of leaves falling upon quiet hours.

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  4. Oh , let's hope to live to a hundred too – with health strength and mental clarity! (Grin.)

    Beautiful puente in any case.

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  5. A lovely poem Sherry. I like the elusive and fading memories of the second stanza. Let us hope we keep our memories until we are ancient.

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  6. This makes me cry. It reminds me of my mother and how she lost my name to her disease.

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  7. Oh, so emotional piece and tugs at the heart.

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  8. Nice Puente, Marian. I dread when those leaves are diminished in their flying from trees in my garden. Sometimes I feel their slowing now.
    ..

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  9. I like the feeding on memories as they sustain us, make our heart sing, make sense of our lives. I so hope I don't ever get dementia.

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  10. The mood here is melancholy, but kind of accepting too.. the way you create the foreshadowing in the second half is very well done.

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  11. This does tug at me... and well done with the form. I like the more atmospheric visual of the first pair with the specific hope/wish of the second, and well bridged. Gosh I hope to be 100 but as you say, only with my brain working and memories intact. xoxoxo

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  12. Sigh. As I read your poem, Sherry, I know that I'll never reach 100 years old. Genetics and mortality tables tell me, this, being a transperson, we die sooner than our age cohort do.

    I do wish, you can see the centennial mark, and share with Luna, your first-hand experience of the past century.

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  13. Sadness flows with the leaves in the beautiful poem Sherry, but it is lovely none the less. Hope all is well with you these days.

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  14. Found myself thinking of my Mother as I read your lovely poem ... her memories gone at the end.

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  15. Sherry, this is brilliantly observed and penned ~

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