On My Way

Read these weekly reflections on The Huffington Post and VividLife.


I was enroute to see my father one more time, deplaning in Detroit, about to make my connection to LaGuardia, when my sister-in-law called me to tell me that he was gone. I’m stumbled about on the jet-way, finding the next gate. I wrote this poem on the way home.


On My Way


I’m on my way as the police


are pronouncing him dead.


And everything around him—


the IV, the bedpan, the doc-


umentaries he loved to watch,


the pills not yet taken—all of it


drops to the ground, like planets


without a sun. And my mother


leans on a chair in the kitchen,


her heart breaking wider than


she ever imagined. How to be


without him after sixty-seven


years. After all we’ve been


through, I will hold her when


I get there. I’ll hold her broken


heart to the sun where I can look


into the canyon opened in her, to


see what she has guarded all these


years, to see where we all come from


and where we all will go. Together,


alone. I will hold her firmly,


gently, so she doesn’t fall in.


 


A Question to Walk With: Tell the story of a moment when you had the privilege of looking into the canyon of another’s heart. What did you see there?


 

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on November 25, 2013 11:24
No comments have been added yet.


Mark Nepo's Blog

Mark Nepo
Mark Nepo isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
Follow Mark Nepo's blog with rss.