Free verse about a friend in a nursing home |
A Hard Sixty Danny sat quietly in his wheelchair, the Marine Corps ball cap on No more Hoorahs, Semper Fi’s or glory for this old man of sixty Just days spent confused, sitting in his wheelchair or lying in bed Dark brown and yellow nicotine stains cover his pointer and index fingers A wheelchair ride or push out to the patio to indulge in a Newport Menthol His only remaining vice, to sit in the sun and inhale his beloved cigarettes The other vices that drove him here are gone forever, their toll extracted They have laid him to waste as surely as I write this with great sadness A hard sixty is not pleasant to see, less so to ponder, to understand Once a young man, all Marine Corps tough, ripped, solid as hell Terrible things can happen in a young mans’ life that last forever They can take you to places that one never imagined or believed The pain of youth is calmed now, the onset of oblivion apparent Who knows who no longer matters, just a wheelchair ride outside A smoke, a far away look and the quietness of waiting for the end There is the occasional smile, a flicker of lucidity, once in a while A question, a look of confusion, a comment, but mostly quietness Thirty pounds of muscle has melted away as atrophy invades A kind brother–in –spirit who takes the time out of his life to visit him Lovingly trying to comfort him in his remaining days, as he always has A sister who loves him so, Mom who is unaware, another Alzheimer’s victim Quietly he sits in his wheelchair on this bright and snow covered day The Newport Menthol appears to give him pleasure and he draws it in Quietly he sits in a world far away, full of giraffes and zebras playing A hard sixty is a scary thought from my point of view, hopefully not his It seems that his demons have finally gone away, perhaps just to sleep He is quiet now and appears at peace, something he knew little of before There but for the Grace of God, go I |