I do nothing but sit
with arms hanging limp,
shoulders slumped,
eyes teary, mouth dry,
unable to concentrate
on anything but
the worst moments,
this loose posture,
unnatural stillness
opens me to
the reality
of my sorrow
unconnected to life
stuck on pause
in need of a nudge
an adrenalin spike
draw in the after glow
of sunset, feel the
explosion of color
let it fill my hollow
space to feel alive again.
Marjorie Burke, a retired pharmacist, lives in Weare. She is co-editor of Women’s Uncommon Prayers: our lives revealed, nurtured, celebrated. In addition, she has published the Melting Ice ~ Shifting Ice trilogy, the journey with her husband’s Alzheimer’s disease. Her newest book When Will Someday Come is a collection of poems about caregiving, grieving and living.