Touchstone
Walking to dialysis, I bounce.
I feel my hips swing behind me,
pumping me high above the playground.
I am young; I have a world ahead of me.
I won’t need glasses for three decades.
Now, I can’t keep them clean. Eyes fail.
My mother became blind in one eye.
The woman I now recognize was my
best friend, who always read, did, too.
It’s different not to see craters
on the moon, or the shadows of
my mother’s face, orbiting above me.
I see everything through jellied gauze.
It’s there, just out of reach, like spirits
in a graveyard that we bring with us.
They set us free. We soar through time,
remembering delight. I see you run after
the wild goose who refused to fly.
You skip trip, chasing after him, laughing.
You bend to pick up a spent magnolia blossom.
I still have its ruby seeds.
Or maybe it’s just one I found, your talisman.
Thank you for this earth, this loneliness
that makes me seek you in my sky.
7 thoughts on "Touchstone"
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I especially love “like spirits
in a graveyard that we bring with us.”
Thank you! Me too! Do you read Neil Gaymond? I don’t think I have his name spelled right. He delights in the sense of things that ‘don’t quite feel right’ and intrigues me. I don’t believe in anything supernatural–except that it’s all super and all natural!
Thank you for this earth, this loneliness
that makes me seek you in my sky.
Strong ending.
An exception poem from you…
Thank you! I sat really still for this one!
“Thank you for this earth, this loneliness
that makes me seek you in my sky.”
Hauntingly lovely ending, Rae!
Again, thank you, Karen. The correspondence makes this a month-long retreat, like diving into a super-clear lake!