The Things Missed
By Ewan
- 1391 reads
The Things Missed
A first word from the first born,
drowned in the noise of working,
shirking duty when mufti's worn.
women’s work, women’s work,
the excuses we used to shirk and shirk.
The first stairs climbed alone,
and just the one watching,
watching your progress on their own.
women’s lot, women’s lot,
theirs is to wait, wait and watch.
School after school on all the first days
she’s waving and worrying,
crying in silence and other ways.
women’s sighs, women’s sighs
running home slowly wiping their eyes.
***
All fathers were absent then,
rearing the children? That wasn’t for men.
Later,
my
parents
became
children
- the ones
I never
had.
- Log in to post comments
Comments
Strong, Strong, Strong. My
Strong, Strong, Strong. My partner's father called him weak for crying at his sister's funeral, the world was different two generations down from today.
We had Mark's dad for the last two years, it was hard, it was hell, and eventually he wasted away until he forgot that he had a body. I was at home with him all day and as he weakened it was backbreaking and twenty-four hour a day. At first we had the aggression and then we had the dependence The whole two years were challenging as the dementia worsened by the day, but the last two days were awful-- we made the decision to do it at home, and I wouldn't have changed it for the world.
But, If Mark goes the way of his dad, I'm sending him to his kids on Day One! :)
A Beautiful, Beautiful piece. It was a good poem,until the end..and then it was great. .
- Log in to post comments
mums were the gods. men..
mums were the gods. men...what do I know, where they go?
- Log in to post comments
Powerful words Ewan.
Powerful words Ewan.
I love the last line.
Turlough
- Log in to post comments
Moving, powerful, this is our
Moving, powerful, this is our Pick of the Day and has also inspired our new Inspiration Point. Do share on Facebook and Twitter.
- Log in to post comments
This is our Poem of the Week!
This is our Poem of the Week! Congratulations!
- Log in to post comments
I read this earlier and
I read this earlier and thought I'd come back to it later on to re-read and now I see it's recieved golden cherries AND poem of the week which I am very glad about. A deeply moving piece - big congratulations Ewan and great to see another blistering Inspiration Point has come from it too
- Log in to post comments
I know of what you speak so
I know of what you speak so well. And speak well you did. My mom had 11 of us - 12 if you included dad. Wonderful writing.
Rich
- Log in to post comments
A strong message, beautifully
A strong message, beautifully written.
It's the parents who have free childcare from grandparents who are the real winners. You only hope they repay the favour twice over. Brilliant POTD.
- Log in to post comments
Very poignant. Brilliant
Very poignant. Brilliant poetry. Congratulations.
- Log in to post comments
Poignant to remember the
Poignant to remember the little things that meant so much unnoticed, unconsciously unappreciated, and unacknowledged at the time.
Though not 'hands on' probably much at the nappy-stage, I gained much from my father's very different involvement over the years, very complimentary.
My mother-in-law asked me what I was going to do when my last child went away (there was a big gap, so had had one or two around for many years). I replied, 'Look after you two', and she wryly realised it would probably be true, though in younger years, she'd defiantly said they would make sure we didn't have to do so. Rhiannon
- Log in to post comments