This is a quirky poem I wrote sometime ago and tinkered around with the past few days. So, for what it's worth (since National Poetry Month is winding down).......
I fall back
through past chapters
of my life, slip
into a sea of change.
Fabric along the shore
feels rough and knotty and so
I pluck a thread, here
and there
a thread
to smooth the way.
And as I pull and pluck
the past flies out of kilter
slips its bounds and
slides away.
I grasp for the familiar
as, like bright balloons
set adrift
in winds of time,
they drift off and out of rhyme and place.
I have loosed the fabric of my past,
unraveled time
and space
and place,
set sail on a course
unknown and out of bounds.
There is no traveling
back
to the place
before I fell
into the muck with my need
to pluck, retouch and refine
what was mine in all its rough-hewn glory.
My story, it belonged to me,
and only me, a journey writ
one page at a time, one blank page
at a time, where one can only edit
in present and future tense.
Like drifting balloons
treasured faces of the past
sail away from tomorrow.
Frantically, I reach
for what has slipped away,
to no avail.
A new course
unwinds
before me.
I stumble
among the paths not taken,
unfamiliar vistas, unknown faces.
With a heavy heart,
like Lot’s wife spared,
I set out blindly
in a desert of regret.
~~Pam Patterson
4 comments:
I have tears. So moving.. Q
And my word verification is "mantra". More tears.
This is so very sad, Sis. I think the final line is the clincher. Regret. An emotion I try my hardest to stay away from.
Boy, we're a pair---you're stumbling around on paths not taken and I'm stumbling on shadows. LOL! You know I love you and feel your pain. I don't think a woman alive doesn't have a little corner room in her brain where she keeps her knick-knacks of regret which she feels obligated to dust now and then.
Fabulous poem from a fabulous poet!!
I think the point of the poem is the old saying "Be careful what you wish for..".
Each thread of our past has a purpose. We might wish we could go back and have do-overs here and there, but, are we sure we would really want those do-overs?
We usually learn and grow more from our mistakes and missteps than from our golden moments.
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