Archive for the 'goodbyes' Category

Sep 25 2008

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sarah flanigan

Sarah Through the Looking Glass - Part II

She fell into
tempted sleep where
her dreams took turns
spinning images
swirling and twirling
“I will not get dizzy,”
she insisted

And the room write-ted
Itself

A book thunked Sarah
on the head and
she sat in Alice’s teacup
bobbing on a slice of lemon
Voices wafted
and she peered over the edge
to listen in

But the book in her lap
insisted, Read me!
Sarah looked at
the cover
whose title did a lovely
pas de deux, bowed and touted
The Secret of Clues

Sarah opened the volume
finding its pages
empty of words
but so deep in wisdom
that a Hand
reached in
and pulled
Sarah from
herSelf
so she could see
Outside

Babbles bounced away
like so many
butterflies
And the Silence welcomed
her back
“It’s been a long time,”
Sarah thought as she
dug in her garden
So many flowers
un-noticed

“Hello, my lovelies,”
she waved.
“So good to
see you again”
And just as
the Sun
reached down in
its morning embrace…

copyright 2008

6 responses so far

Aug 05 2007

Profile Image of sarah flanigan
sarah flanigan

The Places Still

The page was written
before we met
the story was told
as we lived it

Our memories hold
the places still
for fondest viewing -
reminiscing

The laughter lingers
while photos fade
I’ll never forget
that our lives entwined.

copyright 2007

No responses yet

May 19 2007

Profile Image of sarah flanigan
sarah flanigan

It’s Okay

 

It’s okay
push me away
if I’m a threat
to your peace of mind

It’s okay
turn your back
if I’m the cause
of some sorta flack

I’m okay
with your disrepect
your false smiles
and instant reject

Push the button
and then I’m gone
Never happened
unsung that song

Time ain’t nothin’
and neither am I
just someone
who apparently died

copyright 2007

9 responses so far

Mar 25 2007

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sarah flanigan

Car Funeral

Little white chevy
I mourn your passing too much
to utter aloud.

copyright 2007

No responses yet

Mar 06 2007

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sarah flanigan

The Me of Me

 

When my life hurts
I imagine my other life
on the road not taken.

But, my mind wants to know
if is it the road not taken
that determines my life
Or me?

Would I be a different me
if I chose a different road?
Would the me of me
change with the seasons
the colors or the geograhy
Just because?

Or is it a trick
I play on myself
to explain away
my choices
good and bad
right and wrong
smart and stupid?

Even in my imaginings
I seem not able
to remove me from me
Untaken road or not.
No matter where I travel
in cars, on foot, in my imagination
the me of me is always there.

copyright 2007

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Nov 27 2006

Profile Image of sarah flanigan
sarah flanigan

I Don’t Remember You…

“I don’t remember you.” Those words made their mark deeply. I found myself at the edge of a cliff all the landmarks of my affection gone.

Memories, from my first sight of him, cooing and reaching out his arms to me to the hundreds of outtings he, his mother and I made over the years screamed and careened past me. I didn’t know what to say. I felt an odd expression on my face - one I had no control to change.

“Really?” I muttered and tried not to sound sad. He was a child after all. Just eight years old. The complexity of human emotion still a concept he sought to grasp.

“Yeah, really.” He said it simply with no crack in the door to wedge my foot in.

I smiled and patted his arm. “Well, that’s okay honey. I remember you.”

It had been a long time. Fours years. Not long in adult time but it was half of his life span. Children change so much so quickly. I told myself it was okay. Not to feel sad or disappointed. I told myself I was still happy to see him. But I wasn’t very convincing. It gave the day, one of celebration - not just for a holiday dedicated to blessings and thankfulness but of the reunion with Julie, my best friend a different color.

She had moved four years ago to Montanna. How it broke my heart. Though I understood her need to get out of a big city, she had a young child to raise on her own and didn’t want him to grow up around gangs, drugs, crime and everything else that is unhealthy for children growing up in big cities. We managed to stay in touch. To phone and write and send gifts at the appropriate occasions…but it wasn’t the same. There was void without her - without them.

Travis, her son, was as much a part of my life as Julie had been. We went everywhere together. Did everything together. We even discussed the idea that if anything ever happened to her (God forbid) that I would take Travis in a heartbeat. How could I not? He had captured my heart and love the moment I looked into his big green eyes.

The Thanksgiving reunion was not just with Julie but with Travis as well. Except it really wasn’t. Because he didn’t remember me. And I didn’t know how to respond to that. Did I just back off and talk to him as though we’d just met? Ask him about school and his hobbies? It did make sense though - his reaction when I hugged him. The blank look in his eyes. The rigidness of his body. The way children act when doting strangers pinch their cheeks and tell them how much they’ve grown. I suddenly felt like that whacky old aunt that nobody remembers and everybody cringes at their presence.

The evening went on. We played Trivial Pursuit - laughed at the same old jokes and one liners that old friends do. I caught him watching me a few times and I wondered what went on in his mind. Was he remembering? He warmed up a little. Told me about his favorite movie. Complained about his younger siblings who had come into being during the four years in Montanna. Talked about his Dad (the man Julie had married and whom I was yet to meet as well). And I think out of politeness said he thought I was starting to look familiar.

Until the evening came to an end and he discovered I was going back to the hotel room with them. “Where are you going to sleep?” he wanted to know. “Somewhere,” I shrugged sensing an upset in the near future. He didn’t take kindly to giving up a bed to himself and having to share a bed with his mom. No, that wasn’t going to do at all.

And so went the next two days. Little cracks and remarks, cold stares, pouting. Each time my heart broke a little bit more. I chided myself for being so childish. I was the adult. It was my job to take it in stride. I really wanted to, I really did - but I couldn’t quite get over the shock of it. Couldn’t quite accept that I was forgettable. Reason, logic did not work in this scenario.

The night before I left he got upset about a movie or something…it was a trivial thing. I teased him and said “don’t worry I’m leaving tomorrow.” “Yeah and none too soon, either,” he snapped.

That sent me over the edge. I went to the patio and cried. I mourned the loss of my friend Travis. I finally accepted that whatever had happened in the past didn’t matter. It might just have well not happened.

It’s an odd thing when a child forgets you - no matter how much you remember them. When they look at you as they would any stranger. When you want to hug someone who is wary of you. I cannot really describe it.

At the very end we got to know each other a little - in a clean slate sort of way. I rescued him and took him on a little errand while his mother wrangled with the two little ones. I think he decided he might like me.

When we said goodbye he almost looked sad. Maybe some memory was winding its way to his awareness. Maybe it doesn’t matter. He hugged me many times and said “I love you.”

And in the end maybe that’s all that matters.

Copyright 2006

5 responses so far

Nov 14 2006

Profile Image of sarah flanigan
sarah flanigan

This Window

By this window
I have waited.
I have watched.
By day. By night.
I have watched
until my body ached
and my heart wept.

So long you have
been gone
so long it has been.
Now I know
every crook, every scratch,
every detail
that makes this window.
I know each pattern
the sun makes across the land.
Every song the nightengale sings.

Still.
I wait.
Though they laugh.
They whisper what
fool am I.
“he is not coming back, dear Maiden.”
I shake my head.
“The war has sure killed him.”
I close my ears.

This window
where I have perched
knows all my
secret wishes.
My dreams and hopes
live here.

The wait
has been an awful one.
The days and nights
ever longer.
Your face
is but a shadow.
Your voice escapes me.
As the breeze so needed
on hot summer’s night.

It has been forever
and so lonely.
I wonder if
they are right.
I wonder what
fate has befallen you.
What has become of me?

A ghost
I am.
An angel lost
in flight.
Waiting at my
window
to catch you in
my sights.

A thousand times
I’ve felt you die.
A thousand times
I’ve wept.

The war that
have gone to fight
must long been ended.

Yet
I cannot let you go.
I cannot forget
the dreams
that we shared.
and must share again.
And so…
I wait at my window
wishing you back home.

Alas!
the word is come
from you.
The waiting
is near to over.
Again
we will be together.

No more
the window strikes me sad.
Nor the sun’s shadow.
Soon my love
you will be here
at your place.
By my side.
That I have kept for you
so long.

copyright 2006

One response so far

Oct 12 2006

Profile Image of sarah flanigan
sarah flanigan

Saying Goodbye

 

My last sight of them will come soon. A tangle of copper colored hair flying in the wind as she pulls away in the big white truck. A goofy four-year-smile pressed up against the window. A giggle I won’t hear. The taste of McDonald’s still on my lips (from our last fine meal together). The world will be bigger then, as the distance puts us farther apart. The days will be longer and less mirthful. When we’ll see each other again, I don’t know. There’ll be phone calls, perhaps letters and emails…but it won’t be the same. Good bye Jen, see you in the funny papers. Arthur, take good care of your mommy.

No responses yet

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