Mirage

I saw you today.

Driving past the local swimming pool

You were walking to your car

 I almost stopped

I wanted to run over and hug you

Tell you how much I miss you

And then I looked,

Really looked

You were older than that woman

Heavier, for sure, but not by much

Your hair was shorter, combed back

While hers was in a ponytail

She wore at-shirt and shorts,

Things you would never have worn

And glasses

Black-framed glasses

And then it hit me.

That wasn’t you.

It could have been though,

Years ago.

We spent time together at that pool.

Our kids played in the water

And took swimming lessons

And then there was the infamous birthday party

For our Mikes.

Tons of people came to share the fun

You hired a belly dancer

Which made your Mike laugh!

It wasn’t until later that we both

Crimsoned

Children watched the hip-swaying

And breast jiggling

Scantily clad, amply built woman dance

To blaring music

I miss you, my friend.

     A Huge Loss

What do you do when your eyes dim

and gray clouds cover the world

and you live to read and write and

admire the photos of your grandchildren?

 

What do you do with your time when

it hurts to read and the words dance

in crazy swirls that hop across the page

and you have stacks of books to read?

 

What do you do when you feel like

crying about all the lost joys that

you most recently discovered, knowing

that, in time, they will fade away?

 

What do you do when you want to write

but the words drown in a sea of gray

sinking to the bottom of a speckled pit

and fall out of your mind like dandruff?

 

What do you do when the world you used

to see disappears behind a distorting mist

that threatens to take away your freedom,

your driver’s license, your mobility?

 

What do you do when hope seems to have

abandoned you in your time of need and

when you are too young to fall apart and

there seems to be only a steeper fall ahead?

 

You cry, weep, moan and seek the company

of family and friends who will listen and

understand how truly great the loss is

and offer sympathy without comment.

 

You get down on your knees and pray

to the Lord of all, to the God of mercy,

and ask Him to give you a few more good

years of loving the printed page.

 

You think of all the good years that have

come and gone, all the places seen and

friends loved and family times shared,

and rejoice in the Lord’s blessings bestowed.