Inspired by Julie Otosuka's short story, which I read for the first time today and was tremendously moved.
I was in fifth grade
when I learned what
it was to forget
that my grandmother would
sometimes misplace her keys
or lose herself completely
in the space between thoughts
She once drove a car
into the side of
their motorhome when the
space completely seized her
my grandfather screamed for
her to stop but
she wasn't present to
hear him yelling her
name at the top
of his lungs, "Whoa
Tei! Stop, Tei, stop!"
He raged at the
damage, the fear of
losing a woman he'd
loved for 40 years,
and at the space
that stole her a
little more every day
a forgetting that would
not stop or slow
but plowed into her
like she had that
Airstream and that seized
all of us when
she could no longer
remember any of our names
---
April PAD Day 21 - responding to another poem
Sunday, April 24, 2016
Diem Perdidi
Labels:
alzheimers,
aprilpad,
aprilpad16,
diem perdidi,
forgetting,
grandma,
grandmother,
otsuka,
PAD16,
poeticasides,
poetry,
poetry prompt
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