A Far Cry
Immobilized, strangled by panic, I claw
myself awake, my own voiceless scream
echoing,
I’m not dead yet!
My brain is still working!
For days, I can’t drain off my foreboding. Soon,
it will be the tenth anniversary of 9/11,
and my son’s wedding in New York City. Fear
slithers along the implications of the dream:
Our plane goes down in flames.
Subway tunnels turn black, smoke-filled.
Our hotel collapses, story by story.
I’m buried alive, entombed
with my desperate plea. Then,
sudden enlightenment, set loose by a different vision:
my mom, sedated, neatly tucked into her deathbed. Me,
seated next to her, waiting. It’s too late to ask her
if she is afraid. Not too late to enter my dreams now
and answer that question with ghostly bitterness.
This was her final reality, her agony.
This was how it ended.
9 thoughts on "A Far Cry"
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This one is deep…trying to imagine a loved one’s last thoughts.
What an amazing transition. Powerful. The place you went here is intense. I can’t even look at how you got me there…but you took me right into a hospital room, holding a hand that won’t squeeze back …
Kathleen – Very intimate and brave! The emotion intensifies as the poem develops from dream to reality. You do know how to grab us by the throat and heart!
The mix of dreams and reality (from the reader’s perspective) is so true. Our dreams work out so much, and you’ve shared that process with the reader.
Wow- yes grabbed us by the ‘throat and heart’!
immobilized
how it implies twin strands
of “how it ended”
The pain of a bad dream moves so logically to another even greater pain . . . so well done, moving and real.
Juxtaposing fear with actual final moments – it moves seamlessly. Well done.
You bring the reader to terror! Well done!