Poem 14 ± November 14, 2018

Marjorie Moorhead
Long Term Survival

If I were to throw a stone
and watch the ripples go back, back,
through waters of some thirty years,
there you’d be.

Back a little further, and there you’d be, stronger.
Still full of life’s dramas; bursting with creativity.
No track marks mapping grief.
And I? Full-cheeked; rosy with naiveté.

Not yet ravaged by diseases preying on diminished immunity;
their treatments and their prevention.
Shaman now, conceding to ingestion of pills in a daily cluster,
I chant my spell of beseechment:

Take toxicity away; let there be harmony and balance in my Being.

Surviving, feet are in both places; light, and dark.
Having met Mortality in grisly proximity,
it rides along close, forever in the back pocket of Life,
and I know each morning as a gift others never got to open.

 

Marjorie Moorhead lives near the NH/VT border, where she writes about her surroundings and life on our troubled, beautiful Planet. She has work in two anthologies, many online poems of the day, and will have a chapbook out in May, 2019

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One Comment

  1. Barbara Solow

    This poem is courageous and beautiful. It links the survivors and those lost; the light and the dark. This is how we survive. Thank you for writing!

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