Finding It Hard To Cry ... Now
By Gloria Faye Brown Bates/aka Granny Gee
I imagine myself walking on the sand ... once again
Once again ... to feel my son
My mind ... went back to the last night
To the night ... I saw him last
In the box ... out of the corner of my eye
The box with ... all ... that ... light
A light ... spotlighting a figure lying inside a ... box
A little three year old boy trying to climb up
To see his daddy for the last time
Daddy! Daddy! I want to see my Daddy!
I was too far away ... though ... I was there
There, at the opposite side of the room
I couldn't feel anything ... the powerful medicine
Protected me from the awful knowledge, pain
Of ... knowing my only child, my son ... was dead
I tried to float to where my son lay in the box
Somehow, I couldn't make it there
I floated to a couch, to sit beside my son's aunt
I was a leaf blowing in the wind ... I moved
When the wind ... blew
Here, there ... I had no control
It seemed I smiled a soft smile, while floating in a dream
An awful dream ... that for the moment didn't make me hurt
Until ... my eyes would look toward ... the box in the bright light
Did they shine a spotlight on him? Was it my imagination?
When I looked, I saw him vividly ... my baby, my child ... my son
Whose little boy was trying to climb inside the box ... my grandson
I wasn't aware of anything ... yet, I was ... but, wasn't
How was I alive ... oh my God ... Tommy's dead
I should be dead ... the worst had happened ... my child was gone
I looked around ... his wife was greeting people, smiling
Was I at a party? I'm sure she was on the medicine that numbs one
Numbs one from the pain ... I wondered before, how people could smile ... now, I know
Walking on the damp sand, stopping to wiggle my toes
Feel the spray from the waves washing up on the shore
Close my eyes, feel the sunshine caress my skin
The wind blew to dry my tears
I can now, only cry in my mind ... my imagination
I can't cry aloud, anymore ... I'm not sure 'why' ...
I'm sleepy now ... I will go lay me down
To sleep the peace of being asleep
I miss my son, Tommy ... I never forget
I feel the pain after four years ... in a different way
Strange ... I don't cry out loud, now ... only in my mind
This month, Tommy would have been forty-four years old
Do you say Happy Birthday to the ... dead?
Is it right to say, 'Happy Birthday, Tommy'?
I still grieve for you, Son ... no one but, me ... knows it, now
I always remember your birthday, I should
I gave birth to you ... you were my baby boy
You were the only child I ever had ... I don't have you, anymore
I have no ties to you, Son ... two children you had
Never hearing from them, severed the bond I once had
I don't know they can ever be mended again
When you died, all that was a part of you died as well
I'm the only part alive ... that I know
Why? Because ... at one time, I used to be a mother
I can only 'see you' in expressions you had ... like mine
Hear you at times in some things I say, you said like me
Feel you, when we say something ... you would have said
I wonder how other grieving mothers feel
Do they go through such as I
Is this how one grieves ... in the fourth year?
Grieve in a way one can't cry?
Grieve in a way ... you can speak your child's name
Without crying ... finding it hard to cry ... now
My nephew has been gone 10 years (killed by the drunk driver) and I still tell him Happy Birthday. I never tell him Happy Father's Day because he never had any children. When he died, that ended his generation because there was no one to continue his blood line. So if it makes you feel better to tell Tommy Happy Birthday----by all means do so! It is not crazy, stupid or silly. You do whatever makes you feel better. I do. Love, Ms. Nancy
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