"Somewhere out there is the poem
I never finished but always meant to.
The last time I wrote..."
“Somewhere out there is the poem
I never finished but always meant to.
The last time I wrote something with actual
meaning was at my grandfathers funeral
and it was on the back of a packet
that on the front asked me if I had found my way
to God, or if I was merely just walking
in his creation. If only those printed words knew
I’d been walking around aimlessly for so long.
I remember the summer days when Papa
was here still. Being by the crystal blue
and chlorine scented water - I never felt
so at ease with everything that had been going
on in my life, whether it was good or bad.
Papa knew how to make me feel better
about everyone who had made me feel
like shit. “Forget about em’, they don’t
know you like I know you and you shouldn’t
ever let em’.” He was always right, and I’ll take
that advice to my grave. I wonder what
kind of advice he took to his.
It’s been almost a year since he passed
and the only thing that I’ve noticed change
is my grandmothers weight. My family thinks
everything is different and I don’t know why
I can’t see it, can’t feel it, can’t hear anything
but how the wind calls me for when I tune out
everyone around me. Nothing has changed
except for my body since Papa has been gone.
I’ve been convincing myself that maybe
it’s because I can still feel him near me,
can still see him netting out beetles and spiders
from the crystal blue, chlorine scented water.”
- ”The summer when Papa was here,” Colleen Brown
I never finished but always meant to.
The last time I wrote something with actual
meaning was at my grandfathers funeral
and it was on the back of a packet
that on the front asked me if I had found my way
to God, or if I was merely just walking
in his creation. If only those printed words knew
I’d been walking around aimlessly for so long.
I remember the summer days when Papa
was here still. Being by the crystal blue
and chlorine scented water - I never felt
so at ease with everything that had been going
on in my life, whether it was good or bad.
Papa knew how to make me feel better
about everyone who had made me feel
like shit. “Forget about em’, they don’t
know you like I know you and you shouldn’t
ever let em’.” He was always right, and I’ll take
that advice to my grave. I wonder what
kind of advice he took to his.
It’s been almost a year since he passed
and the only thing that I’ve noticed change
is my grandmothers weight. My family thinks
everything is different and I don’t know why
I can’t see it, can’t feel it, can’t hear anything
but how the wind calls me for when I tune out
everyone around me. Nothing has changed
except for my body since Papa has been gone.
I’ve been convincing myself that maybe
it’s because I can still feel him near me,
can still see him netting out beetles and spiders
from the crystal blue, chlorine scented water.”
- ”The summer when Papa was here,” Colleen Brown
Published on July 18, 2018 08:53
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