The Most Important Conversation

Today’s poem came to me as an image. One of a mother standing next to a coffin that has her daughter’s body inside. The mother is weighed down by the grief of losing her daughter, a beautiful young lady. The mother’s soul is crying out in anguish because, in that moment, she realizes she taught her daughter all the wrong things about love. It gets harder and harder for her to stand up straight because she’s weighed down by the knowledge that it’s too late; her Angel is gone and she’s not coming back. So, their souls have this one last conversation, the one they should have had while the daughter was alive.


I offered my once Angel

some words of remorse today.

My silent plea: please forgive me.

After twenty-six years of suffering,

she couldn’t look at me anymore.

She wasn’t able to look into my eyes

and see how I’m suffering

now that I can’t look into her eyes and see

the whole of the world unfolding.

I should have seen the need for an apology

before today. Because when I finally

apologized today, I knew

my apology had come much too late.


Is he here mommy?

Can you tell him, for me,

that I still love him?

That I’m still willing

to fight for our love.


Oh, baby, I’m so sorry.

Sorry I never told you

that the one who truly loves you

won’t ever want to hurt you.

He’ll be drawn to you

and the special light you

emanate.

A light he never wants to dim.


But mommy, he said he loves me.

Sometimes I just make him angry.


Be careful, my Angel, of the ones who

want to dim your inner light

because, for them, you shine too bright.

Every light we see does not illuminate

the path we should take. Sometimes

lust and loneliness pull us onto a path,

one covered with brambles and branches

of a false love and we get tangled all up, trying

to hold on to so many different types of love.

Loves that, in the end, never really were.


Oh mommy, I’m so sorry.

I never wanted to make you cry.

Don’t cry mommy. He said he loves me.

And I believe him.


I should’ve taught you how to protect your love,

to secure your love like you do all valuables.

To keep it locked away where it could be protected

until you found the one who was worth accepting it.

I should’ve told you that just because someone desires you,

doesn’t mean they value you. And you’d never try to spend

counterfeit money so why’d I teach you

to accept counterfeit love?


He said he loves me, mommy.


I’m sorry I never told you

that sometimes it’s better to walk away,

to just let go and walk away.

If you’re walking down the street

and something catches your eye, you stop.

But you don’t have to stay, especially when you see

it never really was what you thought it could be.

Why did I allow you to believe

that finding an old Canadian coin covered in dirt

could produce riches for you? Why didn’t I teach you

that giving away your love should’ve been easy

and would have been easy with the person who chose to

fall in love with your soul?


Oh mommy, why’d I have to die

to finally know he never loved me?


And why did I never warn you baby

about the kind of love that kills,

the love that destroys you because you

aren’t what they need, you’re just what they want?


Peace & Love,

Rosalind


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Published on October 04, 2015 10:04
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