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decay.
i remember sitting and letting tears fall down my cheeks;
those tears soaked my socks
as i was sitting--
i was sitting cross legged
and begging,
i was begging to stay at the hospital because
even though i hated the smell, hated the cold,
hated the looks of pity i got from adults,
my mother was there.
and for memories so fuzzy they are
awfully clear.
it's like wiping down a mirror after a shower
and staring at yourself through streaks of condensation,
the white of the bathroom wall blaring behind you
and everything comes flooding back,
and my own tears soak everything.
they say home is where the heart is
but i really,
really i don’t,
i don’t think that a hospitable can be a home
especially not when you are sitting in the comfy chair of the hospital room
days after your thirteenth birthday.
maybe not a birthday, maybe an anniversary,
an anniversary of how long you had been with your mom,
an anniversary of love,
maybe a last.
my memories of those days are cracked.
maybe just as cracked as the mirror i broke in a dream
maybe i might start believing those myths
because if watching your mother die
on the hospital bed,
drool sliding down her fevered skin
isn't unlucky,
then frankly, i don't know what is.
one of the clearest memories from those days
is also the foggiest.
because i wouldn't stop crying,
i wouldn't stop crying after they told me i was too young,
and too young my ass because i was barely thirteen
and watching my mother die.
they told me to go home for the night,
because i was too young to sleep at the hospital
but maybe home is where the heart is
because my house wasn't a home without my mother.
it wasn't home, ever again, not after she died.
sometimes i still long for a warm embrace
but then i have to remember that she's not here
and it was somehow easier,
yet harder,
when i could still climb the stairs and visit her room
of what was home again when i was chest deep in memories of her,
but i can't do that anymore
because we moved
and i can't do it here because
she never got to see the new house.
and it's funny, because i didn't get to see her
ever again
maybe it's not funny
but people always say that, when somethings not funny
so i always say that it's funny
that she passed exactly a week after my birthday.
i always say it's funny she never got to say goodbye to me,
because she was already too far gone by the time i woke up.
i always say its funny how i wasnt aloud to stay with my mother
for her last, dying moments
and i wish i fought harder because
my memories of her are starting to decay, just like her body
not even a month after my thirteenth birthday
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And the story about your Mom's demise is really sad...But, to get rid of the pain, and to seek relief, write your thoughts and never stop it...If you don't write a diary, start writing one...Think positive thoughts and then, your mother shall live as yourself inside of you...Keep writing...✍🏻✍🏻✍🏻
The last time I talked to my mom was the night before my 13th birthday. She was unresponsive the next morning, and she died a week later. The only thing I really have to say is that it was hard. Really, really hard. So I wrote a poem about it.