My wife Joan has been handling the gradual decline of her life with astonishing composure. But occasionally, the veneer cracks, and I realize how fragile she is, physically and emotionally. I try to imagine myself into her experience, and can’t – inevitably, I drift off into my story, not hers.
So as once before, I’ve chosen the ruthless structure of classical haiku – three lines of 5, 7, and 5 syllables – to enforce some discipline on my monkey mind. Each verse stands alone; they’re not a series.
Walking on water
ice fractures under my feet
fall into nothing
fear constricts my heart
yawning nowhere opens ahead
I squat down and howl
black velvet silence
smothers sounds like shovelled earth
ears ache from listening
snow falls on bare boughs
outlines limbs of family tree
when do branches break?
I know it’s coming
don’t know what or how or when
will I know it then?
eyeless stone faces
watch the ocean roll away
ah, to stand with them