Since you’ve been gone, you
wouldn’t believe how the world
and our lives have changed.
You never knew that I married
a man I love, or that we live
in the desert where I can swim
outside in the winter, or that
I survived a heart attack on
my sixtieth birthday, in the
city where both of us
were born, or that
the grandsons you loved as
children are thriving, though
they have nearly reached
middle age, or that some people
now ride in cars with no
actual drivers, or that it’s kind
of a metaphor for our
country, which has lost
its moral compass, or that
the flag you defended and
saluted is no longer yours, or
that I am thankful to write and
sing in my late sixties, because
I was meant to do those all
along. All of this is true, and
it prompts me to worry and
hope–mostly worry–that
even though I am thankful
for good health, my kind and
compassionate husband, my
own boundless empathy, and
the relationships I’ve nurtured
with my sons, and many diverse
friends, I feel heavy uncertainty
in our country, and anticipate
more losses ahead only
to protect myself, and
of course, it reminds me of
other losses I’ve endured,
especially on the anniversary
of your passing the day after
a big Thanksgiving meal
with your sisters. By now,
you can see that the world
you knew is most definitely
gone, but you live in
my memories, and
I still love you, I grieve for you,
I grieve for me, I grieve for us.
Most of all, I still remember the
many monumental moments
–the good and bad–we shared
so long ago, Dad.

Quite a moving poem, Mark. A way to remember your Dad at Thanksgiving, and describe what our world has become.
That’s a nice picture of you both…
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It came to me this morning, and I pretty much wrote it as I was swimming. Thanks, Tom.
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I too, think of my parents and what they would think of our world today. And I think to myself I am not a part of this world today. The love of family and good friends is all the more treasured today.
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Great insights, Carol. Happy Thanksgiving!
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A very touching poem and one that most can relate to. As things change in today’s world, hopefully love, family, and friendships will remain a constant.
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That is my hope, too, Diana. Thank you for your comment and for stopping by.
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