Downpour



A poem I wrote while thinking of one of my brothers who is going through a painful time, collected from feelings of my own times of grief.




First
you go through grief

 (Grief: see
ripping, howling, tearing, scorching, pounding, searing, gnashing, wailing, falling, weeping, keening)

It consumes
     labor pains of loss
You feel it all / you feel numb
    your chest will crack open           you'll split in two
you have no tears / you have nothing but them

For a brief reprieve, a moment to breathe, there is denial
("I'm okay, it wasn't that bad"        "It's not really over")

Then,
     not stronger, but coming from a place of strength, a will to live,
            is anger
You go through grief in acknowledgement of what is gone
You go through anger
     because of the unfairness of having to live through the first

(Anger: see
blame, justification, self-righteousness, finger-pointing, pain-intoxicated rising from the humiliation of the devastation, surging across the loss)

Next
bargaining
("I can fix this, work with me")

depression
("It's all over, I'll never be alright again")

Until, one day,
there is            acceptance


      Grief is a part of the landscape of your life


Many times
you avert your eyes           not wanting to see              and be reminded
       Other times
you visit the place, finding,
you can still hear the howling
in the corner of the wind
but it is less and less raw
you have to listen hard
            You can still see the places
where the ground was burned bare
yet you are amazed
by the covering of flowers and grass
which have grown and bloomed so well
           You had thought surely nothing could ever grow there again
yet in time
the soil became richer than ever
    When you were ready
to walk into that valley of your heart once more
(and to let another in)
you did so
with the knowledge of the devastation which could occur
and in the strength of chosen vulnerability
you did so anyway


Right now
there is the grief
everywhere, and all around

It is alright for it to flood
it is alright for it to linger: as it runs it's course, you'll rise

it is alright
it is alright

it
is.



Comments

Unknown said…
Beautiful, Sonnet. It really captures the journey of grief.