Lift
As my sister was dying —
lung cancer, stage IV, metastasized —
we celebrated her birthday with helium balloons.
Red, blue and green. A few pink ones thrown in,
my father being the one who went
to the party store to buy them.
Afterwards, no one could bring themselves to throw them away,
so we just got used to dodging the dangling strings
and, as the helium lost its magic, head-bumping
the slowly falling ones.
My sister would sit in her recliner, wig off, glaring at the balloons,
waiting for the end to come —just a few days later
she fell into a merciful deep sleep
from which she didn’t awaken. She was 44.
By now the balloons were on the floor,
skipping across the Berber, puckered at the knot.
Their skin gave to the knife tip, but still they popped —
oh, how they popped.
13 thoughts on "Lift"
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Beautiful and heart wrenching. Thanks for sharing.
The last two verse knock my socks off!
just beautiful
What a great poem. Thank you for sharing it.
Great ending!
“Their skin gave to the knife tip, but still they popped —”
Surrender, release, and then the helium disperses everywhere…
Beautiful!
Wonderful, heartbreaking parallel between human death and balloons’ deflation
Another touching story you’ve told in a short poem. I’m really enjoying these.
After all that time they still had AIR
Wonderfully written!
How tenderly you told her story! The lightness of the balloons against the heaviness of dying creates such magical space.
This is a lovely poem. Thanks.
Wow, thanks all. I so appreciate the feedback.