Saturday, April 25, 2020

Something Sweet




Once, there was a house full of things:
sofas, pillows, a china cabinet full
of pretty teacups. They bring me
my tea  in thick mugs that don't break
when I drop them.

On the bedside table, I pass the hours
arranging neatly, over and over,
the comb, the brush, the toothbrush,
all the things I own now.
I wish there was a soft woolly robe
in my suitcase. It gets cold here at night;
it is hard to sleep when I am cold.

I look at my long wrinkled toes
at the end of my legs, at the end of my bed.
They make me laugh
and remember hazy days in summer,
when I walked barefoot in the garden,
smelling the morning, and smiling.

I hope there is something sweet
after supper, something sweet
to make it worth waiting all day
for people who never come.


for Day 25 at Real Toads: the Suitcase Project

The prompt is to write a poem in first person about someone in a mental hospital, listing what might have been in her suitcase. I once worked in a seniors home, and have made hospice visits, and am always struck by how few possessions a person is allowed or has room for at the end of their lives. There would be photos of their families, and houses full to bursting with Things, and I would ponder how the women had once had houses full of things, while on their bedside tables lay all their few possessions, a comb, a toothbrush: no warm clothing or blankets, no belongings, no comforts. Just bodies, being housed.


5 comments:

  1. OHhhhh....I wish you were in my study with me right now as you would have heard the very loud audible sigh as I came to the end of this most amazing post. The details are excruciating. This is SO SO real. Just an incredible write.

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  2. The second to last stanza is especially touching.. the humanity of the narrator shines through.

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  3. "something sweet to make it worth waiting all day for people who never come." This is so evocative!

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  4. So bittersweet, how you write about such an experience. You capture so much in your words - the living/dying in an institution, the returning to ashes with no possessions.

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