Mourning of once was, but never was |
To me, Just as spring, these are born anew And make their mark; it can be The budding of a new tree Or The breaths of newborns to the elderly. But as it lives, it also dies, And unlike the corporeal, The proof of existence is bare. This is not a tale of one death but many. Death of no body, but the knowing Of those who exist out of reach, Met through a web of souls Where every being can be joined Through merriment and sadness and assembly. The end of no people, But the friendships once was, Faded over time, Faces were never known And never will be, Forgotten in the most human fashion. Not real physically, But as real as any. A death with no funeral, That cannot be mourned in full. But to say a piece of my soul Belongs to another who I have Never known, Never spoken to, Never saw - Do I earn the right to mourn For the blurred line of truth? In the way one mourns The memories of a childhood Which has grown and left, Or In the way one mourns The disappearance of a pet A faithful companion, departed Or In the way one mourns The passage of time That takes people down different paths. In this way, I do. The string does not exist, But it does exist nonetheless, As it does with every tie cut Now forgotten, but not forgotten. Laughter; the solace in each other when there was none. Tears; weeping into air when nothing else could hold. Fear; sharing the worry of being forever alone. Love; to love, love, love, in a world where it lacked. This is not a tale of one death but many. Deaths that pop from history and aren’t easily renewed. It’s easy to disappear, leaving no chance to lament, but rather scattered memories and a yearn to have them back. Some good, some bad, but all Real To me. |