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13 Ways of Looking at a Black Bird, A deer's scream, Caretakers, caring for the dying, Deborah J. Brasket, difficult relationships, hospice care, lyrical poetry, Mother Dying, Paul Harding's Tinkers, personal, poetry, processing the death of a loved one, prose poem, writing
October is the month I was born and the month my mother died. Sweetness and sadness rolled into one. It took me a long while to process her loss and those last difficult days I spent caring for her when she was diagnosed with colon cancer.
And, of course, the way I process difficult things is to write about them.
I first wrote about her death in my post “The Deer’s Scream, My Mother’s Eyes, and a Ripe Strawberry.” Not long afterwards I was working on a post about Wallace Stevens’ “13 Ways of Looking at a Blackbird” while reading Paul Harding’s Pulitzer Prize winning Tinkers.
Harding’s novel about a man on his deathbed looking back at his own and his father’s life reads almost like a prose poem at times, written in short, lyrical vignettes. It reminded me of my own mother’s death, which I remember as a succession of brief, intensely vivid scenes.
That’s when I wrote the following prose poem modeled after Stevens’ poem. While based on personal experience, it is fictionalized. I’d love to hear what you think. I’ve pulled this from the archives to share with new readers.
13 Ways of Looking at Dying, Just Before, and the Moment After
By Deborah J. Brasket
I
She streaks past me naked in the dark hall. Light from the bathroom flashes upon her face, her thin shoulders, her sharp knees. Her head turns toward me, her dark eyes angry stabs. As if daring me to see her, stop her, help her. Or demanding I don’t.
I struggle up from the cot where I’ve been sleeping. Through the open doorway, she’s a slice of bright light, slumped on the toilet, the white tiles gleaming behind her.
She kicks the door shut in my face.
II
Late June she’s diagnosed. October first gone. Mid-August her strength rallies.
“I don’t think I’m dying after all,” she tells me. “They got it all wrong. As usual.”
“Don’t look at me like that,” she says.
“Like what?”
“Like that.”
III
The plums lie where they fall in the tall grass. I pass them on my way to the dumpster, where I toss plastic bags filled with fouled Depends, empty syringes, and morphine bottles.
On the way back to her apartment I gather up a few plums, passing over the ones pecked by birds, or burst open from the fall, or too soft to hold together, carefully selecting those with bright tight skins.
“Where did you get those? Did you pick them?”
“No, they were on the ground.”
“Garbage. Throw them out.”
“Garbage,” she insists. Her foot hits the lever, opening the trash can as I try to push past her.
When she’s not looking I fish them out and wash them in cold water. I place them in a bowl in the refrigerator next to the bottles of Ensure and pediatric water that she won’t touch.
When she’s asleep I take one out and press the cold, purple flesh against my lips, biting through the taut, tart skin to the soft, sweet meat beneath. Sucking up the juices.
IV
“Come here. I want you to sit on my lap.”
“No, Mama. I’m too heavy. I’ll hurt you.”
“Come, I want to hold you, like I used to.” She pats her lap.
Her hands are all bone now, her nails long and yellow. Her pajama bottoms are so loose there’s almost no leg to sit on. I balance on the edge of the recliner and she pulls my head down to her chest.
“There now,” she says, “there now.”
I feel like I’m lying on glass. Like any second I’ll break through. Like the long sharp shards of her body holding me up are giving way, and I’m being torn to pieces in her arms.
V
“She says you stole her car.” The social worker from hospice sits on the couch with a pad and pen in her hand. She’s new. They’re always new. We’ve had this conversation before.
“It’s in the shop. The clutch went out, remember Mama?”
“You can’t have it. Bring it back.”
“You don’t need it. Besides you can’t drive.”
“Anna can drive me, can’t you Anna?”
Across from the social worker sits Anna, who cares for my mother when I’m at work. She’s slumped on the hearth, biting her thumbnail. I sit facing my mother. We are like four points on the compass, holding up our respective ends.
“That’s not Anna’s job, to drive you.”
“I know what you’re doing,” she tells me between clenched teeth.
“What am I doing?”
“You know what you’re doing!”
Her fury flashes across the room in brilliant streaks, passing over Anna’s bent head, the social worker’s busy pen. It hits me full in the face. I do not flinch.
VI
In spring the wild turkeys wander down from the hillsides and graze in the meadow behind our home. Sometimes they come into our yard and stand before the glass doors. Raising their wings and flapping furiously, they butt their hard beaks against the glass. Attacking what they take as another.
VII
She’s moving in slow motion, inching across the room in her walker. Her sharp shoulders are hunched, her wide mouth drooped, her once silver hair yellow and dull. Dark eyes burn in sunken sockets.
Slowly her face turns toward me, her fierce, bitter-bright eyes fixed on mine.
“This is the worst thing that’s ever happened to me,” she says.
VIII
I kneel at her knees weeping. Her hands lightly pat my head.
When I look up her eyes are closed and she looks so peaceful. Her body sinks deep into the soft cushions steeped in her own scent. The wings of the chair, the arms and the legs, rise up around her, the sharp edges of her face and body sunk in softness.
If I could I would let her, cocooned like that, sink deep beneath the shade of the plum trees outside her window. Sink into the earth just like that.
The tight bitter skin broken through. All the sweet juices let loose.
IX
The ground squirrels are popping up everywhere, their long tunnels weaving through the roots of the old oaks, loosening the soil that anchors them to the slopes. We fear they will eventually cause the trees to tumble and the hillside holding up our home collapse.
So we feed them poison, sprinkling it around the trees and along the squirrel-dug furrows, as if sowing seed. It’s the same stuff found in the Warfarin my husband takes to keep his blood thin and clot-free.
Sometimes I imagine them out there beneath the oak trees in the moonlight, the squirrels running in slow motion through dark tunnels while the blood running through their veins grows thinner and thinner. The light in their brains grows brighter and brighter until they finally explode, like stars, in a burst of white light.
X
She sits on the edge of the bed hunched over, letting me do what I will. The lamplight spills over our bent heads, catching the sheen on the tight skin of her calves.
I hold her bare foot in my hand and rub lotion into the dry skin, messaging the soft soles and the rough edges of her toes. I spread the thick lotion up her thin ankles and over the sheen of her legs where it soon disappears. I pour on more and more.
Her skin is so thirsty. There’s no end to the thirst.
XI
I listen to her breathing in the dark from my cot in the next room. I hold my breath each time hers stops, waiting, listening. Sometimes minutes seem to pass before the rattle starts up again. Each time it’s longer and longer. Soon the minutes will turn to hours, the hours to days, then weeks, years.
How long can you hold your breath before your heart bursts?
XII
I touch her hair, her cheek, before they wheel her into the room where she’s cremated. I wait while she turns to ashes.
XIII
It’s too dark to see the night I hear the deer scream. There’s only the sound of thundering hooves and that long terrifying cry passing from one end of the meadow behind our home to the other, before crashing down a ravine.
It ends abruptly, as if a knife sliced its throat.
I see the deer often in my dreams, screaming past me in the dark, slowly turning her head toward me. Fixing her fierce, bitter-bright eyes on mine.
I do not turn away. I let her drink and drink.
First published in Cobalt Review, Issue 9, Fall 2013, in a slightly modified version.
My debut novel is about a missing mother and how her family struggles to cope with her absence and fill the empty spaces in their lives. When Things Go Missing is now available at Amazon, Bookshop, Barnes & Noble and other major retailers.
Discover more from Deborah J. Brasket, Author
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This is a breathtaking and devastatingly beautiful piece of writing. The raw, unflinching honesty with which you capture the brutal, intimate, and sacred dance of caring for a dying mother is nothing short of profound. The imagery—from the fierce, bitter-bright eyes to the thirsty skin and the fallen plums—will stay with me for a long time. It’s a heartbreaking and perfect tribute to the terrible, loving, and impossible work of letting go. Thank you for sharing something so powerful.
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Thank you so much for sharing this, Srikanth! This is the kind of response to one’s writing that means so much to an author, that makes the hard work so worthwhile.
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I agree. This is exquisite, raw, and real. I went on a painful but loving journey with you Deborah, remembering the time I had with my mother and wishing I had been more present with my mom, and less focused on the care.
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Aw, Brad, that means so much to me. I think many of us who have cared for a dying parent feels that pain and tenderness. It helps knowing others connect with that.
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You’re most welcome.
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Fascinating thoughts on death, Deborah.
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Thank you, Tim!
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This poem took my breath away and reminded me of my mother’s last day as she lay dying of an aggressive cancer. I feel the loss of her every single day.
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It’s so hard, isn’t it? My heart goes out to you.
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It sure is. She didn’t want to go.
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Mine didn’t either. When she said this was the worst thing that ever happened to her, it broke my heart.
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🥰
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this is all of the emotions rolled into one, intense and powerful
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Thank you, Beth. It did feel like that, a roller-coaster of mixed emotions.
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Deborah…dear Deborah. Thank you so much for sharing this here…for those of us who didn’t have the honor and privilege of reading it in 2013 – when it was first published. I love Beth’s comment below – all of the emotions arrived for me as well. But the greatest was gratitude. Grateful to you for your bravery taking me into depth with your words. Tears in my eyes, even now. Thank you for these lyrical vignettes. A format new to me and oh-so powerful in your hands. xo 💝
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I so appreciate that, Vicki! It was a new way for my to write that was so perfect for that story, the mixed emotions that shaped the whole experience. I don’t think I could have told it any other way.
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I can see and feel that. It’s a format – a structure I think I’ll need to try for those very reasons. Complex emotions and individual “scenes”, moments, memories. Love learning from you! ❤️
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Very sad.
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Yes, it was.
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This is stunningly beautiful, Deborah. I did much the same for my mother – same, but, of course, different. It’s hard, it’s a honor, it’s love even at it’s worst. Thank you for sharing.
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Aw, thank you so much. It is a heart-breaking experience. And an honor, as you say. I hadn’t thought of it that way, but you are so right. I think sometimes of my own children being there for me when I go. I hope it will be a little easier for them.
BTW, I’m deep into Catling’s first book and loving it.
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Thanks you, Deborah, for reading Catling! I’m thrilled.
And yes, I think we can make it easier on our children by focusing on gratefulness and love, but it’s still hard. I take care of my dad and will be there to help him transition.
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