The walls were stripped bare,
other worldly,
frozen in time.
They said “come, pick something”.
The rooms that once felt so full
now echoed,
silently,
like a well you drop a coin in,
but never,
hear,
a splash.
They said, “take what you want”.
Can you package up revelries?
the ones that have faded,
like old photographs,
Left too long in a shoebox
in the attic.
They said, “Here, take all of this”.
And for a second I forget
…
He won’t need it.
I select a single, bright, obnoxious green lure.
I always loved the way he said
chartreuse,
as I sat there watching his steady hands.
They created beauty
from random piles of mismatched things,
deer tails,
rubber,
cork,
tin.
His blood gifted that power to my mother,
and she passed it down to my own bones.
I marvel at how such a small token,
can hold the breadth of such ancestry.
And I think
I can feel him
smiling
at me.
About the Creator
Ellie Hoovs
Breathing life into the lost and broken. Writes to mend what fire couldn't destroy. Poetry stitched from ashes, longing, and stubborn hope.
My Poetry Collection DEMORTALIZING is out now!!!: https://a.co/d/5fqwmEb

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