Inside the nursing home
lives a multi-level birdcage
that takes up an entire wall
in what the residents call
The Living Room, a funeral
parlor-like room with wingback
chairs and mint-colored couches.
The birds in the cage are cheerful
and talkative. The nursing
assistants feed them and clean
the cage each day. It’s a legend,
these live captive birds, but we
are disappointed to learn the birds
are gone by the time our Mother
becomes a resident there.
We visit her without the chatter
and flutter of caged
birds. Would it have made
any difference? After she dies
my sister and I learn they brought
the birds back to the nursing home
but neither of us will even pretend
to wing our way back there again.
19 thoughts on "Inside the nursing home"
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This is really haunting. You’ve expressed the sense of loss and disorientation that comes with losing a loved one.
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The word “wingback” and lines
the chatter
and flutter of caged
birds
gets so well at how the residents feel and how they will never fly out of there
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I love the backdrop of color and setting details for this story’s mystery, and its evocative ending. Great to be writing with you again, Marianne!
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So much power and impact. Brought me to tears and I will think about this for a long time. So good.
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Dark threads all through this, Marianne. Would the birds have cheered your mother up? Would they have struck her as fellow captives, and would misery have loved company? Much to ponder.
exactly! Thanks for reading!
We are all caged birds trying to sing, aren’t we? So exciting to see you and your poems here, Marianne!
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This is vivid! It reminds me of a therapy dog visit we made to the Thomas Hood nursing home that had a bird cage in the lobby.!
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I’ve sat on many a mint couch. You took me right there. ❤️
me too, me too!
So smart and rendering this image of captive birds.
thanks, Shaun!
So wonderful to see you here, Marianne! Love the intimacy and tenderness of this poem. How haunting is the image of the caged birds juxtapositioned with your mother in the nursing home.