Just Some Things to Tell You
Two months ago I was sitting in a CLSC
waiting for my name to be called by the
nurse
who was coming every few minutes for a
new patient
when suddenly your name rang out through the room,
or, rather, my name with your maiden
name next to it.
It lingered, hesitantly, this unreal
thing,
this newly-coined name of someone who,
had she existed,
would have been an amalgam of the two of
us, I guess.
I stood up, went to the nurse and
explained the mistake
but she waved it away with a smile: my
last name
or my mother’s – it’s all the same in
their files.
Then we were together there for a
brief spell,
And, among all those strangers, it was
time spent well.
Here’s one more snippet I saved for you
from the flux of days which we live in,
and which we marvel and laugh at
but promptly forget. In January, your son,
the eternal joker, plunged himself
heavily into
the shallows of the Dead Sea and dove to
the beach,
his best man yelling ceremoniously, “The
first man ever
to dive in the Dead Sea!”, and your
son’s son
trudged through the sand on his little
legs,
gurgling “I want to do it too!” and trying
to catch up
with his father, who walked out of the sea
with his eyes closed to shower off the
salt from his face.
An entirely forgettable scene -- if it weren't for
a sort of grace, which, somehow, had something
to do with you, and how things could have been.
An entirely forgettable scene -- if it weren't for
a sort of grace, which, somehow, had something
to do with you, and how things could have been.