A poem about my mother |
My Mother at Ninety I look at my mother at ninety and she is beautiful, hair now grey but eyes still laughing blue At eighty she was still young to me standing straight and tall against the world At seventy her adventurous spirit led her to worlds unknown with her lively children, now grown At sixty I couldn’t imagine her old, not Mommy with her spirit so bold In her fifties, still working, loving, hoping for grandchildren perhaps, but not caring as long as her children were happy, laughing, sharing, having a life with her My mother at thirty-six was beautiful, curly brown hair, laughing blue eyes, a warm smile, husband, three girls. Happy at last At thirty-six my mother was dead, laying in a pool of her own blood, her babies mangled, her life ripped away. I imagine my mother at ninety. I imagine her life not lived. I imagine what life would have been like. My mother at ninety was beautiful. ~cynaemon, 23 August 2013, revised 20 May 2018, revised 6 May 2019 My mother was killed in a tragic car accident when I was ten years old. My sisters and I survived. My mother and her friend were killed instantly. What would life have been like if she had lived, if she was still alive? I can only imagine. |