Dear Friend,
Through all the years of our young motherhood
we exchanged fat letters, full of our busy days.
I typed mine on the old Underwood Grandpa gave me.
You wrote yours by hand, in your lovely script.
As our children grew up, our letters became sadder.
Our children were struggling, suffering, ill,
making their painful way into adulthood.
I remember when your letter came
that said your son, like mine,
had been struck down.
I remember when your letter came
that said your son, like mine,
had been struck down.
How our hearts ached for those two boys
who were in their prams when first we met,
who played together as small boys.
who played together as small boys.
They shared a similar brilliance
as they grew,
as they grew,
and a similar fragility.
We commiserated then,
two mothers of sons in pain.
two mothers of sons in pain.
Now we are old. We each have made
our peace with the past, each found
the place in the world
where we are most at home.
Letters became emails,
then facebook messages,
that dwindled off into "likes".
We are both just so tired.
I miss receiving those fat envelopes
stuffed with news, with titles of the books
we were reading, the music we were
listening to.
It is a Land of Nostalgia, looking back:
your house, full of plants and dogs and kids,
Neil Diamond blaring on the stereo.
My house full of laughing children,
my big garden.
my big garden.
Those busy, happy years that filled our pages.
Not much to write, now that we sit, dazed
and exhausted, on our couches, staring at
a world gone mad on our tv screens,
things we never thought we'd see.
things we never thought we'd see.
When hope is hanging by a thread,
how would we ever find the words?
But I think of you, often,
remembering those years
when we were young
and our children's songs
were still waiting
to be sung.
remembering those years
when we were young
and our children's songs
were still waiting
to be sung.
"It is a Land of Nostalgia, looking back:
ReplyDeleteyour house, full of plants and dogs and kids,
Neil Diamond blaring on the stereo.
My house full of laughing children,
my big garden.
Those busy, happy years that filled our pages"
Oh yes, that is what I remember about letter writing too. They were often very long and filled with news. If we are lucky, we still have some of those letters. Somehow emails aren't quite the same. Sigh. And Facebook, even less so!
The personal touch in handwritten letters is greatly missed these days. A land of nostalgia indeed. It was a thing of beauty, so was a joy forever.
ReplyDelete"Letters became emails,
then facebook messages,
that dwindled off into "likes".
Hmmm.
What a wonderful poem that speaks of both celebration and loss - so many memories and experiences shared and a friendship that sounds invaluable
ReplyDelete"fat letters" deserve this fat poem, exactly like the letters you describe--I hope this is a friend who can still read the poem. "Not much to write, now that we sit, dazed
ReplyDeleteand exhausted, on our couches, staring at
a world gone mad . . . ." and yet, here you are writing. The perspective is right--when the present is bleak and the future uncertain, let's look to the brightnesses in our pasts! Love this and all the pictures it gave me.
Yours is another poem with a great shape, Sherry, and such a personal, autobiographical one. I love how you shared moments of happiness and sadness in those ‘fat letters’. What a wonderful friendship grew out of your shared motherhood!
ReplyDeleteReally beautifully expressed, Sherry. Tugs at the heart strings.
ReplyDeleteYour poem meanders through the life of you and your friend like the meandering river of time. I hope you find a way to some inner peace and happiness now that your health confines you and the world News is so depressing.
ReplyDeleteSherry,
ReplyDeleteIt's hard not to have frequent bouts of wishful thinking, especially when considering how the far back past, was mostly concerned with raising children and dealing with the lifeone knew.
Nowadays, we can have the unrest of the whole world, resting upon our laps..
Thank goodness for the flowers and trees, to offer an occasional diversions...
An excellent letter of catch-up..
So very movingly written, Sherry, the pictures you paint filled with nostalgia and loss but also the gold of hope that something beyond exhaustion and weariness of life has survived, waiting to be salvaged.
ReplyDeleteA beautiful poem of two souls connected by letters and life.
ReplyDeleteA sad but lovely story of change.
ReplyDelete