11/15/24

Non-Winning Poetry

 Every year, I submit writing to a writing contest held by Salt Lake Community College. Every year, I am a non-winner…that sounds better than loser, I guess. Here is this year's submission. It is all about grief. Enjoy!😉 (excuse the bad formatting on the hands poem..if you’d like to read this via google docs, leave your email in the comments)

Thoughts On Dementia

It’s almost as if you have already died

What would the funeral have been like? (NO, let’s not think about that now!)

Flashbacks of memories come like phantom smells,

You’re like a ghost yet still fully alive.


It’s like you've died,

But you're still on the planet.

I guess the truth either way:

Missing you just sucks.


My hands Her Hands(Mom)

Numb and needles Keyboards                and calculators

Wrenches and grease Around a mug of Blue Moon

Basketballs and baseballs In a fist while dancing

Fishing poles Snapping along with music

Rocking children to sleep Hugging her children

Holding husband’s hand Holding newest grandchild

Knit is prayer Moving knitting needles

Gripping pens Driving to the next adventure

Tired from work Tired from work

Full of duty and honor Full of duty and honor

Most of the time All the time

Now search for peace. Now rest in peace.


Deafening Death

No death is kind

Grief is intangible and painful all at once.


I knew nothing of sorrow before mom’s death:

Heavy, thick, black.


Silent like the end of the day;

Silent like the morning when no one is awake.


Yet deafening:

Stealing air from my lungs.

Stealing words from my tongue.

Stealing sound from my ears.


Deaf.

Silent.

Empty.


Empty But Full

Am I filling this emptiness in my soul with food?

An endless smorgasbord of sugar and carbs.

A void that cannot be filled.

I am stuck on empty, yet keeping something filled.


Emerging

Like a butterfly emerging from its cocoon,

I’m rising from my deep slumber.

The grip of grief 

The depths of misery

Slowly release their force around my neck.


The journey from deep depression

To the surface has at times seemed like eternal eons

And at other times it seemed to flow quickly like raging seas.


Time really does heal

Yet the length not prescribed or set

In fact, 

Time can lapse differently,

Possessing its own personality.

For one,

Time speeds along

Like a cheetah to its prey.

For another,

Time slowly slacks,

Like a sloth to the next branch.


But time 

Whether quick or slow

Chisels at grief

Changing one’s soul

It never truly leaves

Just makes the griever fortified.


So , I  slowly will fly like a butterfly

Bouncing from flower to flower

Taking my time

Embracing all feelings

Healing at my own pace.

Emerging.


Death is Imminent.

Just as I was born of blood,

I will return to dust.


Death knocks at everyone’s door

Each of us answering at a different time.


Just as the doors of life opened for us,

They must also close.


We try to ignore this truth; our destiny,

But often receive reminders


The death of loved ones, inescapable.

Death is imminent.


Constant reminders to cherish the seconds and minutes we are given,

As we learn to live in each moment.


Cemetery Contemplation 


I sit feet away from a baby girl

Who died about three months before I was born.

I wonder what she would have been like today.

         Would we have been friends?

 

I sit yards away from an open pit

Expecting its occupant’s arrival today.

Whose partner has waited nearly thirty-three years

To meet his sweetheart again.

I wonder what that reunion would be like today.

         Would seeing their glorious reunion bring comfort to the broken hearts of those who lost

                     Mom, sister, or grandma?

 

I scan the hundreds of faded, weathered and worn headstones

Each of them representing a person,

Each of them important to somebody.

I wonder if the memories of those departed begin to also fade with time.

         Will I one day be forgotten?

 

I see flowers and trinkets

On or near many of the markers

Only the most recently erected have such tokens

I wonder about those who leave momentos.

         Will their giving hearts ever be mended?

 

I realize that this sanctuary is for us, the living.

Here we come to remember and to reflect.

This spot is not for them; the dead are not present.

I wonder if they ever look down on their own graves.

         Would they find our gatherings and rituals strange and unnecessary?

 

I notice walls surrounding this memorial.

A separation allowing us to leave our world behind for a moment.

A holy site giving solace from problems, worries and cares.

I wonder if everybody feels this same peace within these walls.

  Are these bricks enough of a separation from the distractions of the world for all?


I feel the stillness

As I contemplate my purpose here on this planet,

The fact that I too will one day die

Leaving this world and all my earthly possessions behind.

I wonder what I’ll see as most important on that last day.

Will I be scared?


I reflect on what is truly significant in this life.

The flowers and trinkets mean nothing to the dead,

But the people who visit do matter.

I wonder who will visit my future grave.

         Will they know I loved them enough?


A punch in the gut

A punch in the gut

A sharp shockwave of sorrow

My mother’s passing.


Mom’s Dead; She won’t answer anymore

It doesn't seem real

She won’t answer anymore

Dialing reminds me.


Instructions

How to deal with death:

Curl up in ball; then repeat

Note: time will vary


Time (A found poem)

Time is an enemy

A fire

Evacuating the soul

Time causes an aggressive search for meaning

Leaning on important memories

Trapped in an escalator

Influencing your dreams

Leaving you scratching your head.


Grief is a Bastard


Alone and abandoned,

you leave it unattended,

packed far down in the darkest

forgotten corners of your brain. 


But like a 3-year-old begging for attention, 

in a crowded department store,

grief tantrums. 


Raging,

punching,

tearing up from

long dried ducts.


Crying alone feels right.

In the dark isolation of a cold room,

under warm covers.


Crying feels like a necessary solo act.

Unlike a musician,

who solos surrounded by a crowd,

and more like a pilot

trying to transatlantic in solitude.

Yet like Amelia,

solo proves fatal,

extending the life of grief,

keeping you alone and abandoned.

Grief truly is a bastard. 


Deal with Dementia 


Who will answer the phone today?

Will it be the woman who remembers,

the one who interacts?

Or will it be the woman who doesn’t remember,

the one who talks in circles, repeating the same questions?


So sometimes I avoid calling,

then guilt sets in.


Face to face isn't much easier,

sitting in uncomfortable silence,

worrying about what she is thinking,

or feeling.

Knowing the conversation may frustrate her,

may be hard to follow.


Then the anxiety of the "what ifs" enter my mind.

"What if” this is my future?

"What if " that little struggle to find the right word

is an indicator of future struggles?

“What if" I should be seeking early

interventions now.


What if, what it, what if...


Losing a parent is hard

and I often feel like I'm losing Mom,

over and over.


Pieces of her die

in circular conversations.

A reminder of a long hard process  

without a predictable end point.


Losing a parent is hard.

Losing a parent over and over is taxing.

Still there is no choice but to

deal with dementia. Grief is a Bastard 2


Dementia is a Thief


Stealing moments that should be monumental,

birthdays once recollected with precision,

now only recalled with reminders.


Names once salient,

now faded,

replaced by relationship tags:

Your husband,

Your daughter,

Your sister.


Physical death still distant

yet mental death is imminent.

Close connection

ripped away like a shoplifter

and their five finger discounts.

Dementia is a thief. 



*all poetry written by Alice Ficklin




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