The Language of Loss. Barbara Abercrombie

The Language of Loss - Barbara Abercrombie


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attended together, an acquaintance came up and said to me, simply, “There’s someone missing.” That felt correct, in both senses.

      —JULIAN BARNES

      I swear I saw you leave—

      bereft of words, feet dangling

      above ground as though

      deprived of bone and sinew,

      light shining through

      your worn garments.

      Never again can I angle

      against you, reattach

      a button to your jacket.

      You are gathered elsewhere,

      alone and emptied. I see that,

      the way, sometimes, one can

      hear the end of a word before

      its completion.

      —JACQUELINE DERNER TCHAKALIAN

      The autopsy showed a near-total occlusion in the left anterior descending artery, a major supplier of blood to the heart and a conduit so vital that physicians often refer to such a blockage as “the widow-maker.” It was unclear how long his heart had been diseased, but I blamed myself. I blamed myself for causing him stress during our bad patch. I blamed myself for not picking up on his fatigue or any other small symptoms he might have shown. I blamed myself for not probing a little more on the day before he died, when he called and sounded agitated. I would blame myself for years to come.

      —KATIE HAFNER

      I am distracted, disoriented, disconnected, pacing the house in circles, mindlessly retracing my steps over and over again....One afternoon I finally force myself to go looking for a new bed; it is my first and only outing toward that end, and it is an unmitigated disaster. I cannot believe I am doing this. I cannot believe I am talking to an overzealous salesman about buying a king-sized bed, which in itself sounds to me like a berserk act....

      It is apparent that I cannot seriously think about buying a new bed. I cannot think about anything except the irrefutable fact that Bill is dead. The realization, which has been strangely slow in coming to me, death certificate and all—that I will never see him again, that I will never hear his voice again, that he is extinct—hits me like a roundhouse punch. I am on the ropes and there is no one here to get me back on my feet.

      —RUTH COUGHLIN

      The Stages of Grief:

      Denial

      Anger

      Bargaining

      Depression

      Acceptance

      I cannot let go, cannot

      follow the protocol, refuse

      closure, refuse to doubt you

      are about to slip back through

      a loophole, undo the tricked-out

      trickery of the spring your heart shut

      down in the willful green of the thick

      coming grass. I rage at you now as I did

      not rage then. How could you

      have left me to the futile pink

      of the Red Bud preening

      like a buffoon through the glass

      of our bedroom window? Look:

      I stand ready to make a deal.

      Take what you need, then call it quits

      with eternity. I know you grieve, too.

      I will never ask another indulgence

      from whatever it is we end by

      calling upon in extremis. But you do

      not, will not, did not, come back

      for all this time I pass confounding

      assumptions, eluding the rules

      for healthy adjustment and getting on

      with the rest of it I still cannot accept.

      —CAROL TUFTS

      imagine the earthquake—

      it’s possible,

      eventually

      the big one

      we all know

      is coming to California

      we should get ready

      be prepared

      the water, the food

      flashlights and batteries

      and some of us do that

      make our little plans

      to be brave and resourceful

      to survive

      the foundation cracking

      the walls crumbling

      the windows shattering

      you think you know what it will be like

      but you have no idea

      when the walls begin to wail

      and peel away from the house

      when you can’t find your shoes or the dog

      when shattered glass shreds your feet

      when the air turns red

      with sirens

      when your world

      dims black into loss

      the foundation not cracked

      but buried—

      unimaginable

      but possible

      and it will be like nothing you’ve ever known

      it will be like grief

      —BARBARA ABERCROMBIE

      Methought I saw my late espoused saint

      Brought to me like Alcestis from the grave,

      Whom Jove’s great son to her glad husband gave,

      Rescued from Death by force, though pale and faint.

      Mine, as whom washed from spot of child-bed taint

      Purification in the old Law did save,

      And such as yet once more I trust to have

      Full sight of her in heaven without restraint,

      Came vested all in white, pure


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