The problem with the dead.
By Rachel
I found her in bed, still warm.
Without the look of peace I was promised,
but instead a permanent look of terror.
Eyes wide, jaw agape,
hands clenched into claws.
She was alone at the end of it all.
And I'll never forget the way her skin felt
as I touched her arm to be sure.
There is no heartbreak comparable to this.
Simmering beneath the surface
to overwhelm when least expected:
At the best of times,
it shows in the lines under my eyes.
At the worst,
I can't get out of bed for fear
moving will make this real.
I can't seem to sleep without her face
haunting my dreams.
Sometimes healthy, often not. Always dead.
Most generally with her corpse
strategically placed around my house
in the place that will scare me most.
Draped across the bathtub,
mangled on the floor,
next to me in bed.
Always for me to relive finding her
over and over again.
It wakes me in hysterics - unceasing until -
I fall back to sleep and repeat the cycle.
The problem with the dead
is they come back to life again and again
when you just want
to forget they ever lived in the first place.
I can say with certainty, I've never felt this alone.
No amount of company is comforting
and I keep waiting for that person - the one
who will break through and provide
a shoulder, an ear, a hand to hold,
that will actually help.
Then I realize she's the one that died,
and I'm alone again.
Awards
Comments on "The problem with the dead."
-
On Saturday, December 10, 2011, veingo
(526) wrote:
This is exactly the kind of thing I needed to read tonight. Real words with real feeling. And though it broke my heart to read, it made me feel something like I have not, for a long time. Thank you for that. ^V^
-
A former member wrote:
Your poems about your mother end with a little black hole. A black tunnel. It is most likely because that is how you feel inside. I'm so positive that someone out there will take you in and gave you all the love you feel your missing. You're smart, you're creative and anyone that can't see that is a moron.
-
A former member wrote:
Hey Rachel, its whort_diddy, I just wanted to let you know that I am back:) I was reading some of the old stuff I wrote, lol, good times, anyways, hope you are well, talk to you later, whort_diddy
-
On Sunday, January 3, 2010, Riven Waker
(317) wrote:
this paints a rather bleak picture - nicely executed through skilled verse
-
On Wednesday, January 28, 2009, lovechild
(43) wrote:
this is so close to describing what it is like to be w/o my daughter, who died 7 years ago when she was sick. time has not made her stop appearing to me in dreams and awake.
-
On Thursday, October 9, 2008, BrokenAngel
(28) wrote:
same... so sorry :'(
-
On Tuesday, October 7, 2008, Leith Plunkett
(237) wrote:
This was crafted beautifully, dripping with sadness. If this was factual I am sorry you are left with such pain. :-(
-
On Tuesday, June 17, 2008, DIATRICUS
(64) wrote:
touching and honest -- you brought the imagery to life (ironic)... well-crafted.
-
On Wednesday, June 11, 2008, Bluegirl
(177) wrote:
This is so haunting. I felt a little scared through the whole thing. Nice work. :)
-
A former member wrote:
this is beautiful.. nice write
-
A former member wrote:
Hey...I think it's very masterful...I just joined this site...but...you are a talent..and your work is very compatable with the way I'd write things...
Blessings
Runic
-
On Saturday, May 10, 2008, Dancing_Monkey
(1228) wrote:
Perfectly worded. And I feel the pain now. I'm sorry Rachel
-
On Tuesday, April 22, 2008, Six-Out
(1423) wrote:
My phone is on. My number is in yours. Use it. i may not be able to break through, but I can be there when you're crumbling. I'm sorry for this. :-/
-
On Tuesday, April 22, 2008, NikesRain
(1240) wrote:
had me in tears for you and your loss, and from memories of a similar time... i don't think anyone can say anything to make it 'better' but i hope in time, more cherished memories will stand out over the painful... our hearts and thoughts are with you...
-
On Tuesday, April 22, 2008, Sketso
(416) wrote:
Nagging plague of heartache and memory shared in an amazingly perfect way.
-
A former member wrote:
That was of documentry realism at its best, extremley well done.
And at the risk of sounding basic i've found writing is the only face I wish to see in times such as those, i'm sorry...