Grief Poem #129
by Kathy Lynn Harris, copyright 2017
I saw an older man today
in the January-crisp morning light
walking a fence line—
faded ball cap down, blue flannel shirt,
shoulders hunched against the wind,
breath like smoke
from one of your old Marlboros.
And there it is again, that abrupt
catch of throat-breath,
quick-snag of heart.
As if I’m 14 and arm-crawling
under a sagging barbed wire fence—
dead weeds in my face,
following you into the
next section
of winter-brown pasture.
Moving as fast as I can;
trying to prove I’m good
at this sort of thing,
thinking I’m in the clear.
Then a razor-sharp
rusty prick
hits
and the back of my shirt rips
and maybe my right shoulder bleeds
and I realize I had misjudged
time and space …
And that I wasn’t past
the worst of it
at all.
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