When was the last time you sank
into the kindness of an armchair, home alone, no TV, laundry machine, or dryer running; no music, book, cellphone—quiet enough to hear wind blow, rain plink patio, birds chirp? Resist the urge to do anything but sit. Notice the home around you—what you pass many times a day, no longer see. Not what needs dusted, swept, uncluttered. What you chose to hang on walls, arrange on surfaces. Start where your eyes fall first.
A large painting by a dear friend’s only child who died young. A night view of a crossroads in a Kentucky river town, painted diagonally from his second floor—a dark diamond of traffic light, historic homes, bare trees, just fallen snow.
Your grandparents’ walnut china hutch. The broken hinge of its lower cabinet not opened in years. On top, a globular urn painted with a Garden of Eden scene–a naked couple climb a viny tree. Eve’s hand cups an apple. The vessel holds what’s left of my husband’s ashes, those not already spread in gardens, forests, the Blue Ridge Mountains he so loved.
14 thoughts on "When was the last time you sank"
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Karen your poems
this month are hitting
many nerves. This one
is full of heartbreak
& love
Thank you so much, Jim.
Oh. I really love when we step into the poem already hearing the echos.
This is rendering on a whole nother level.
Excellent.
Thank you, Coleman.
I agree with Jim and Coleman. I love the deeply personal of this piece. I almost love your poetry and I like how it’s going and continuing grow. I also love your use to the prose poem.
Thank you so much, Linda.
This is lovely in its personal details and in its reminder to take time to notice the things we tend to walk by or think only of how they need to be fixed.
Thank you, Nancy.
Great title. Draws me into the poem so well.
Love:
quiet enough to hear wind blow, rain plink patio, birds chirp?
And heartbreaking and tender:
what’s left of my husband’s ashes, those not already spread in gardens, forests, the Blue Ridge Mountains he so loved.
Thank you, Pam.
For me reading this poem —there is no separation between the internal and external worlds you describe and share in deep reflection—almost like your poem pauses time itself as you regard all around you and take us with you on your journey from the armchair. That last line truly got me. Thank you for sharing you beautiful poem.
Thank you, Ann.
Love the title and how it turns into the poem. Thank you for the house tour of part of your life and for the message to look around at what we have, not the mindless stuff or the cleaning chores. Appreciate the people loved and lost.
Thanks, Sylvia.