Twenty prose poems
by a dementia victim’s wife
I wrote my first prose-poem not long after I joined a support group for caregivers. At the first meeting I attended, a wife, sobbing, talked about her pain at moving her demented husband (who had reached the wheelchair stage) into a care facility. She did not return to the support group, but her honest anguish moved me profoundly. Her crazy pain later saved my sanity—it strengthened and comforted me. We dementia partners grieve differently and rarely openly.
I hope that sharing these poems may help other caregivers feel less alone, alarmed, ashamed. And other wives and husbands less isolated and insane.
A great many people have walked this way. It is a marathon, not a sprint.
Foreword
The man I love is sitting quietly
in a lifeboat drifting away from me.
Handsome, lovely eyes wistful,
he seems at peace.
I am alone, flailing, lost
in the midst of icy waves,
feeling my heart freeze
as we part
Mortality
I took the dog for her ablutions late last night.
Like her, I raised my head and smelled the air–
salt mist as light as unshed tears.
The setting moon was glowing through a broken
cloud and showing opalescent beams,
its white transformed into a giant pearl.
The sea made lengthy shushing sounds out on the sand.
I was at peace and grateful that I live upon this bit of land.
It has become the center of my universe.
Two angled long and heavy wings stroked through the air,
A huntress owl: she shrieks exalting in her kill.
I recollect the weight of my mortality.
My body with its aches, and seeps, and ails will never leap
to feel its joy again. My death postponed is gift enough.
Yet still I mourn for what I once was given.
The dog, now through with checking what’s inside her yard,
goes smartly up the stairs, into the house and sleeps.
I come in and lie in bed.
2004
Diagnosis
My husband tries to comfort me:
“No one can choose his death, and
this disease is not the worst.
It does not hurt. What is, is.’
I have gone mute.
My hand and heart cannot
console or fix a bit of it.
Our ending is announced.
We lie beneath our lovely new duvet.
My heart explodes with pain, with rage.
His brain is tangled, filled with sludge?
My shining miracle with crooked tooth
that let me dare to love, whose thought
went vaulting, wide and free—he’s gone?
BREAK THE WINDOWS OF THIS HOUSE.
PULL DOWN THE RIDGEPOLE.
LET HOWLING WINDS BLOW THROUGH THESE DOORS.
BURN. THIS. HOUSE. DOWN.
April 2005
In Praise of Winter Colors
Praise God for making months of wind and cold, and seas of slate,
and waves that pull their scarves behind,
and for fierce walls that meet to throw
a riptide gout of brightest water up,
disintegrating, sparkling, gone.
Praise God for passing glories.
Praise God that he has planted me beside this violent, raging sea,
beside a creek become a plain of sand full of gull bones,
whose owners skimming had no thought
of wave-broke wings. Oblivious,
once soaring, free, now dust.
Praise God for life, for death.
Praise God for gifts of grace, for love that cherishes,
for children who survive their houses’ fall, for barren lives
refreshed by gentleness to bloom and bear good fruit.
Praise God for joyful marriage-beds.
Praise Him for covenants, for hope.
You, Lord, provide and take away. I bless your name. Your mercies
followed me through all my days. Do not withdraw
from my heart now. The shadows swallow
all my sight. Remove my rage at death
that, creeping, first steals mind.
My heart bangs. I cannot breathe. I choke upon my tears.
Be with me, Lord, in these hard years. Help me to love
each day the warmth of his sweet flesh,
and grant me courage, calm,
to match his own.
2006
Memory
The life we lose through forgetfulness resembles
The earth that sticks to the sides of plowshares
And the eggs the hen has abandoned in the woods.
Robert Bly
Courting Forgetfulness
I am hunting for my eggs, courting my memories now,
the remainders, meaningful to no one else.
They constitute my life, and I’ve been careless:
The difference in our thumbnails, yours so very large
the thatch you sport on arms and fingers but not toes
the weight of your hand now at rest in mine.
Your round eyes–hazel as you say–
with edges so deep blue that it was years before
I was convinced. Such lovely eyes.
Your sense of humor always wry, somewhat
slant-wise, a punny way of looking at the world.
It is the last to go.
The twenty times a day you said:
you are the best thing that happened in my life.
(And me reversing that. It’s my own truth.)
How waking up I found each day a mug of coffee
at my bedside and you, still damp from showering,
in the space I made for you
How much it’s been your joy to feed me,
fuel me, care for me in all ways, on all days.
I never made a meal you didn’t like.
How you remember garbage night,
show patience to hostility, comfort,
never criticize, smile at me with love.
How sad the dishes are now kept where
you can’t find them, that your legs won’t
carry you downstairs, your beautiful strong legs.
These days are like the things
we put in the garage,
too good to throw away
but soiled.
My love, my love, I’m losing you.
Our bed is shaking all night long—
your body jolts at losing you.
My heart is shaking, jolting too.
2008
untitled
You are still present.
I hear your jokes, your worrying
that your child’s not home.
You want to help with errands.
You tell me that you love me, that
I am a saint, I do too much.
But you no longer glory
in the waves, no longer feel their push
and power in your veins.
And when at night I’m cold from
taking out the dog, your body can no longer
make a spoon for me.
Instead you lay your hand
upon my arm and with your clumsy fingers
find a place
that is not smooth
and pick at it. That hurts,
but not as much.
2008
Ashes
The house has burned down.
I walk barefoot on the cinders.
My soul has fled the land.
The sparkling wave
is wrecked upon small
grains of rock.
I had my own small rock.
It was your first love gift.
We understood its now.
What magic then.
My body whirled
in your great field of love.
That now is ended.
Not to be fixed.
Age comes with ashes.
2009
Respite: Time Apart
Tired.
Used up.
Sick.
Impatient.
Cruel.
Demeaning.
I have forgotten who you are
how much we loved
who I am.
Dear God, how much misery?
And now I hurt you more,
my sweet innocent who does not understand
why he cannot stay home with me and pet the dog.
The pain,
the hopelessness
have shattered me.
What kind of God would take away a mind
in tiny pieces?
Leave the owner struggling to walk,
baffled that his body doesn’t work?
Our lonely aching has no cure.
May 2009
The far shore
My heart is numb.
It is a dead thing
a stiff brown lump.
My eyes are dry.
Their tears have fled.
I can no longer call them up.
Love is not reigning
over me for I
inhabit no man’s land.
Even I cannot find me.
And who is this who cannot dress himself?
Who pees into his paper pants?
Whose fingers stiffly fumble at the sheet?
I do not know his name.
He shares my space.
He is a dumb numb thing like me.
Still bulky in our bed, he‘s with me yet.
A glass half full.
A death just half completed.
2009
Respite Care at VA
And now I am hiding from you.
I know you suffer.
I feel you shake.
My heart’s a stone.
I am worn away. In truth
I am beyond breath.
My flesh has trumped
my spirit, sent it away
just as St. Paul said it could.
I am too dulled to care.
I’m gone. You’re gone.
I feel not much at all.
November 2009
This Long Good-bye
This long good-bye goes on.
Life happens. Life is good.
Death happens. Death is good.
The maiden Sibyl, Ovid says,
adored her life. She struck
a deal with god to live
a thousand years.
Given this long life
her body shriveled
to a voice kept in a cage.
Distasteful. Children jeered.
Sibyl for long centuries
Contemplated death—
Embraced it at the end with
lover’s arms. Instruction this.
2010
Despair
In the beginning,
we have the comfort
of sweet flesh.
We god-imposters
know what ought to be
and how to fix it.
In the end
we know impotence, emptiness.
We are silent, we are lost.
Then does God speak?
To us? Or only
to the universe?
2010
Grace Moment
Let me write it down, dear, before
the ending comes and your hand touches me no more,
neither twitching, nor obsessively stroking
a small imperfection as if to fix it,
nor with a clumsy searching so different from your first embrace.
Let me write about the beauty
of your hand taking mine, which I felt again tonight,
write it quickly down before my sense-based memory fails
and I lose you beyond death:
Your soft, thick, kind hand folding around my fingers makes me feel
delicate and fragile, like a maiden or a princess from a fairy tale.
I am so beautiful and safe.
Your hand turns me miraculously back in time, or out of it,
and I am washed clean by your great love.
You, perfect lover, withhold only judgment.
You, my heart’s heart, with your round long-tipped hairy strong firm
fingers that always, always spoke of love–
to feel your hand’s embrace, it’s that. It’s that I want.
Oh my love. How can I write it down.
2010
Defeat
What did I know, what did I know
of love’s austere and lonely offices.
Robert Hayden
Those Winter Sundays
I want to be the woman
that you’ve loved so well.
You were so proud of me:
It was a life-defining gift
back in the glory days.
This current scene of carnage eats my soul.
I can see you trapped inside your loss:
I hate it that I am so weak.
You poured your power
into mastery, your passion forged precision.
Discipline shaped your soul’s beauty.
Even your ruins are noble.
I’m none of that.
Patience is not my virtue.
I am not strong.
I cannot keep the measured life.
Forgive me, oh forgive me.
October 2010
After ‘Placement’
in a room filled
with the silence of absence
a woman plays solitaire on
a computer
it makes no sound
she does not talk
even to herself
October 2010
Folie ‘a deux
That first night was the miracle.
The scales fell off my eyes.
It was your passion
and the rigor of your honor made it so.
Months passed. I rethought
what I once knew. And then
I came to you
as to a home I’d dreamed of.
We are an old story–
a second chance, Boaz and Ruth–
written new. All of us
attracted, strange and upside
down with an
intensity that made
us crazy
that leaves us crazy still.
Surprise! I’m very ill, the abyss so close
I can see into it. My body’s
honoring requests I sent.
This separation rips the heart from me.
The boundaries are marked out:
Our bodies die apart.
In my mind (though not in yours)
most of me is always
next to you.
October 23, 2012
The dimensions of iron
‘. . . seen through the eyes of surfacing fish’
Al Young
Geography of the Near Past
Along with space and time
the quanta of an iron atom
have fourteen more dimensions
in God’s mysterious universe.
A few of those dimensions may
be relevant to you now
in your eternal present,
your black hole of mind.
Somewhere among dimensions
unseen and unimaginable
I wander seeking you.
Vibrations make my day if I
pass by in close proximity.
Too many dimensions,
too much ambiguity,
an end to any sense that
I can muster for our world.
Your travels have overwhelmed us.
Even our common language is lost in space:
an unexpected ending to our story.
But I still love to sit here
with a part of you. Second time
round or eighteenth, you
remain the center of my universe.
2013
Gratitude
your love, the many years
your handsome body slept beside me,
manly and so comforting.
your spirit, calm and thoughtful,
patient and forgiving,
you filling in my blanks.
your wisdom knowing that
we fit, the blessing
that you found me.
your special smell–the clean
soft, needy, male scent–
I hold it in my heart
your decency, reserve,
your brilliant mind that
sees and speaks so honestly
the energy you hold, the curiosity,
the mischief that you make,
the trueness of your soul.
if I had had you only for a moment’s
blink, it would be joy enough
for an eternity.
October 23, 2013
Proof
‘We are held
as in a carton
if someone
loves us.’
Kay Ryan
Eggs
I was not familiar
with support
outside.
I must have had
some. I
survived.
When then in
mid-life I came
into such a
state of joy
as if I, newly hatched
From shell, had
first seen sun,
known space—
I did not understand
it was your love
that gave
it all to me.
Now I know.
2014
God’s Confetti
“Look at that cloud of seagulls!” I exclaim.
“God’s confetti,” you reply.
I savor that day:
We sit at breakfast together
Watching the sun flash
on hundreds of wings
rising rank after rank
in a swirl that only God could
have choreographed.
Winter mornings
the air is so condensed
it makes a prism
for all the colors in the world,
magnifies them as it does all joys.
We walk and talk
and whoop with laughter.
You remain, in this our forty-fourth year, still
The noblest man I have ever met.
My heart is swollen with our love.
But you are gone inside your exile.
I miss the God you brought me.
The green flash last night
gleamed so long I almost
heard your voice.
October 23, 2014