23 years ago on earth day, I scattered my mother's ashes. I stopped by my girl friend's house...she was supporting me. She was dressed in jeans and sneakers.
"I checked Emily Post on what to wear to an illegal ash scattering the ashes of a woman I didn't like," she said.
We met my brother who had picked up the ashes.
When it was done, we went to McDos with my two dogs, Amadeus and Albert. It generated this poem. (I write very little poetry and do not consider myself a poet.)
SCATTERING HER ASHES
Offshoots 9
Geneva, Switzerland
Clumps of sodden earth
cling to our boots.
The forest whispers,
whines.
A brook, too full
complains,
falling over itself.
A bird
Trills a prayer
for no more rain.
My brother carrying the
carboard carton,
goes first.
As he pushes through brush
he forgets to hold a branch.
It hits me like another
forty years ago
in a different wood.
We come to a meadow with
last year’s grass
engraved in mud.
He lays the carton
on the ground.
“Here.”
Inside, a plastic bag.
We each take corner.
The wind catches the powder,
lifts and plays creating
a mini cloud
too close to earth.
I think
How much power
that ash once held,
how little power now.
Done.
We walk back
trapped
in our ancient silences.
1 comment:
Ah, yes. I renter it well. ❤️
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