A poem about my mother and the human brain as Alzheimer's takes over. |
I imagine the windows of her brain; stained glass, crayon colored panes. Growing up; delicate pink, candy innocent, then ruby red rose romance; bloody crimson with childbirth. For many years, a life shared. To nurture and care for your family. We fracture, tattoo, test and weather. Question, fight, love and admire. Then varnish, stain and seal what remains. The doors in a cluttered, shattered mind exist for protection, hopefully a holy kind. This heinous disorder opens cloistered space, fragile pieces fall apart, blowing wildly. Confusion scattered in the wind. Memories collide, what fits where, hats on shoes, multicolored cobwebs, a projection of thoughts run berserk. A kaleidoscope of life can not rest. Photos spill; leaves caught in a storm, lost forever. This is a lady. Her mouth spoke with pearls. But this brain is a sailor with dirty slander. Imagine video priest and neighbor nights. Her hazel eyes blaze with truth and lost trust. Do not comfort. Her frail fists crave a fight. Precious time lost forever is never reclaimed. Lessons learned too late, are now unknown. Now you see it all like a merry-go-round. Is a simple life really sweet? Let only love pass as cobwebs fill empty spaces. When her mind fills to a point of capacity, she seeks a protective shell and retreats. Cushioned womb, pot of tea, quiet library bar the door, rest earned, hang a "Closed" sign. By Kathie Stehr |