I plan this
week’s meals, make a grocery list and finish my coffee.
I put on
galoshes and drive to the store, 10 miles in the rain.
I check the eggs, weigh
the apples, and decide against salmon. Maybe next week.
It’s a day
like any other day. Only sadder.
After I put away
the groceries
and drive 14 miles to the gym, I
work up a
sweat and wait for the endorphins to kick in.
They don’t
always, despite the hype.
I get home and
pull the condolence cards out of the mailbox.
Reading
through them makes me feel better and
Worse at the same time.
Worse at the same time.
So I cry.
I cry and
wonder how my daughter-in-law is and
what my grandchildren are doing.
what my grandchildren are doing.
I cry like I’ve
done nearly every day for the past
41 days since
my son took his last breath,
Since I felt
his skin grow cool under my hand,
Since I
kissed his forehead for each of his grandparents, his uncles, his aunts,
I cry like I’ve
done nearly every day for the past
41 days since
I finally let go of hope.
Crying is
now part of my daily routine.
I take time
for it.
It’s a day
like any other day, only sadder.
And dinner still
needs to be made.