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  • To Lourdes Islas

    Lourdes Islas Martinez, I didn’t know you.
    I never thought I looked like you.
    But I think of you almost every day.

    When I was little, I thought of you when I looked down at my thumbs.
    “Those skip a generation,” Mom said. “My mother had thumbs like that!”

    Is it weird to say I feel connected to you by toe thumbs?

    As I approached forty (and Mom had made it to sixty-seven) I wondered if what had taken you early from your family would take me early from mine. Does cancer skip a generation too?

    When I lost my pregnancy and someone said something ugly, I cried and cried and cried.
    I stopped taking your great-grandbabies on field trips.
    On Sundays, I hid between the pews.

    Do you remember how your memory snapped me out of my misery when I had a panic attack too?

    It was Mom’s memory of you and Aunt Lizzy and the watermelon seeds.
    It made me think of something else.
    It was another weird connection (kind of like toe thumbs).

    ‘Cucaracha! Cucaracha!!! CUCARACHA!!!!’
    Mom ran into the kitchen screaming while you were on the phone!

    You ran into the bathroom, screaming at those little black ovals.
    They were floating, creeping, SNEAKING toward Lizzy’s chubby legs.
    Mom laughed and teased, “Those are just my watermelon seeds!”

    You were too kind to punish her.
    You just said, “Wait until your father gets home.”

    Do you know Mom ends every story of you the same way?

    My mother was the kindest person.
    I wish you could have known her.
    You are just like her.
    You would have loved her.
    She was very social.

    That day I cried until my heart was in my throat,
    I was thinking of you, Mom, and Aunt Lizzy and the watermelon seeds.
    I was picturing you in heaven pain free.
    Were you whispering to me?
    Or was it God with a divine Dad joke?
    I don’t know, but this was the thought that came:

    Dead people don’t gossip—they have better things to do.
    Don’t you?

    That snapped me up and made me laugh.
    It was true.

    I couldn’t picture you fretting over church gossip.
    In the presence of God and everything holy and good.

    Though I hadn’t been the one spreading it,
    I’d been repeating it.
    I’d been saying it in my mind and thinking things no one should.

    That answer gave me peace that day, but it didn’t stop compulsive thoughts I tried not to think or “bad” feelings I tried not to feel.

    If someone at church was unkind.
    Or angry.
    Or disappointed.
    Or they gossiped about me.
    It got me every time.

    When that happened, I didn’t think of things said and done when I was young to try and make me conform or “believe.”
    I just physically felt the same things as if I was again fifteen.

    It would be years before other answers came.
    Such as not allowing others to mistreat me or my family (even at church).

    But that answer that day, thinking of you, turned my thoughts toward God.
    It put me in His (and your) light.

    Jennifer Joyce Weaver

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    Voting ends October 4, 2024 11:59pm

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    • Jennifer, I love this. I am so sorry for your loss, but the stories that you have heard about your relatives are what truly keep them alive! I encourage everyone I know to ask their grandparents and/or any relatives they have about stories their family has passed down and memories that they made that will make you remember them. It shows that you…read more

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  • My Guiding Light

    The anticipation of a conversation
    a moment’s pause, a heart’s sensation
    An expectation of words unsaid
    A binding connection, a delicate thread

    The fabric was woven, the story was told
    a legacy kept, forever to hold
    A journey of words, a longing to know became a tapestry rich, a narrative to grow

    The art of conversation, a gentle guide
    leading me through the labyrinth of time
    To listen to memories, a heart’s treasure a mind’s archive, a soul’s measure

    All that you were and the joy you spread became part of me, of who I am
    Reflections of my younger days your voice, your presence, your beautiful face

    Our memories, an album of distant times
    keeps the joy of better days alive
    Reluctant to embark on unknown paths
    comfort comes from waves of our past

    Your existence upon which I became
    was a guide, a light, so much more than name
    The courage you showed throughout your life
    echoes deep within the depths of my mind

    In that stillness, I found my voice
    A sense of clarity, a heartfelt choice
    The silence beckoned, I found my way
    to a place of peace, where love will stay

    Jody Seymour

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    • Jody, I am so sorry for your loss. Your poem is truly inspiring and I enjoyed it. My favorite part of this would have to be when you said “Your existence upon which I became was a guide, a light, so much more than name.” A person can truly guide us in many different life directions, so we must surround ourselves with people who inspire us to be…read more

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  • Dear Grandpa

    I’m driving through Kansas City one summer afternoon and realize that I’m the closest I’ve been to the house you lived in since you died. It’s one of the first times I’ve driven myself from my hometown an hour away. When you were still here, I was too intimidated by the congested freeways I’d need to take to venture too far away from home on my own. Now I dream each day of driving across the whole country, seeing new visions of wildflower fields, mountains that paint the sky, and a secluded nightscape where my view of the stars wouldn’t be muddled by street lights. But right now memory and melancholy strike my mind as I pull into a grocery store parking lot to buy a quick dinner at the deli counter. The grief I felt over your loss never culminated into any melodramatic scenes of emotional upheaval that would win awards and praise if it were in a film. Those feelings usually come to me in small, mundane, reminders of you that make me tear up in crowded store aisles where I’m trying to focus on finding what I need quickly and not bumping into grocery carts. When I get in my car, I allow myself to cry-really, truly cry-and I have to pull over after my sunscreen drips into my eyes and makes them sting mercilessly. When I take a break to eat the sandwich I picked out, it’s so bland I think I might be coming down with something and losing my sense of taste.
    It’s been nearly three and a half years now since you died in the hospital on my 22nd birthday. We were supposed to go out to my favorite Thai restaurant for a celebration dinner, but after we found out you were gone, nothing sounded good anymore and we ate boxed macaroni in front of the television. I never got to see you when you were in the hospital, and I wish I could have had the closure of a visit and a “goodbye.” Earlier that day, I’d discovered that I’d been the only person in my history class to achieve a perfect score on an exam, and I told my mother who then told you when she visited. I wish I could’ve spoken with you one more time, and it feels so oddly humbling to know I was in somebody’s thoughts and memories on their last days on earth. It reminds me of both my cosmic insignificance in the grand scheme of the world and also of the monumental importance of those close to you who few others will ever know of. You were the kind of individual who was always curious about the world around us and aiming to gain more knowledge, which is something I always try to emulate. You were also endlessly kind to everybody who knew you, and I could see this in the group of friends you kept throughout your life up until the very end. One of my first memories is of visiting you and sitting in a booth of the restaurant where you and your friends would have coffee and breakfast each morning. I eavesdropped into your conversations while I tore apart a cherry pastry with my fingers. I couldn’t make sense of what exactly everybody was talking about, but I felt sure that I wanted to be like you when I got older. Sometimes I see you in other groups of people I see in cafes or restaurants who are chatting amiably and seem to be having the most wonderful time. Today I am twenty-five years old and spend many of my days alone, and I hope that someday my wish from over twenty years ago comes true.
    I wish that we could really talk about how my world looks today; I would trust any advice you have for me. A part of me worries that my younger self was too unappreciative and self-absorbed to truly know what I would be missing out on today in your absence. Your death taught me to always be mindful of how fragile human life can be and that I must never take others for granted. Memories of the past always haunt my mind when I am wondering what awaits in the lives of my loved ones and how much time we have together. I went on a vacation with my aunt and my mother where we spoke about you, and my aunt told me how much you loved me. I told her that I wished you knew that I loved you just as much, and she assured me that you did. A sense of relief washed over me then, and I hope that she was right and you knew how much you meant to us.

    Juliana O'Connell Hill

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    Voting ends October 4, 2024 11:59pm

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    • Juliana, I am so sorry for your loss. It is so true that we don’t know how much a person means to us and how much we truly love them until they are gone. Your grandpa knew how much you meant to him and how much you and your family loved him. It is perfectly normal to wish to talk to him once more or to wonder if you did enough to make him feel…read more

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  • Mr. Bruno Mars Murphy Dear Mr. Bruno Mars Murphy Many won’t understand how much your death impacted our family. “He was a bunny?” Was a question asked frequently. The thing I’ve never disclosed was the vulnerable moment where you were there as we broke the news of the divorce to my son. You became emotional in his arms letting me know you could feel the pain. You watched us struggle through the transition. Bittersweet moments just as it got near the end of the painful chapter , You were gone. I think you’d be proud of us. We are all so strong and remember you. I am still working on that book. Your memory keeps me motivated to finish what I started and keep the vision with a strong why. Thank you Bruno for being apart of our family. I’m so glad you fought your way to Leo at the rabbit farm. Love Jasmine

    Dear Mr. Bruno Mars Murphy

    Many won’t understand how much your death impacted our family.
    “He was a bunny?” a commonly asked question.

    I’ve never disclosed with anyone the vulnerable moment where you were there as we broke the news of the divorce to my son. You became emotional in his arms letting me know you could feel the pain in the atmosphere.

    You watched us struggle through the transition. It was so bittersweet that right before it became final and on Father’s Day
    You were gone.

    I think you’d be proud of us. You saw all of us at our worst moments. This is why I remember you fondly, you loved us anyway.

    By the way , I am still working on that book that you gave me inspiration for in January 2021.

    Your memory keeps me motivated to finish what I started and keep the vision with a strong why.

    Thank you Bruno for being apart of our family.

    I’m so glad you fought your way to Leo at the rabbit farm. LOL. Always a fighter.

    Love always!
    Jasmine

    Jasmine Murphy

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    Voting ends October 4, 2024 11:59pm

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    • Aww Jasmine, I am so sorry for your loss. Pets can become such big parts of our lives and we can make family bonds with them! I am happy that your bunny got you and your family through some tough times, as that’s how you will remember them forever. Mr. Bruno Mars Murphy will always live on in your memory!!

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  • "LIFE IS AN ONGOING PROCESS"

    “Go Ahead!” “Take Your Time.” Life Is An Ongoing Process”,
    From One’s Life To One’s Deaths, We All Struggle For Existence,
    It’s The Time Between The Two That One’s Great Wisdom Is Missed,
    Now Where do I Even Start From this long, successful list?

    A Rising Student at Cathedrals,
    A Regentonian with Great Grammar,
    A Traveler Past Lagos Canals,
    To A Bay Fourah away-planner,
    A man that favors morals, ethics and logistics,
    And motion, momentum, Work done in Applied Physics.

    A Father To Many And Grandfather To Many More,
    Some Of Us May Openly Grieve While Others Have In Store,
    The Sight From The Juba House Window Darkens As Far As Can See,
    Will Miss The Stories At The Table Of Brer Fox And Anansi.
    The Balls Played In The Compound Near The Toyota and Mercedes,
    Will Miss Your Baritone Laugh Accompanied With Star or Baileys.

    I Recall Your Tuning To The Radio,
    BBC Or 98.6 Ratio,
    To Pick Out Rhetoric In The Daily News,
    Is a Skill I Wish To Master In The Views,
    “If You Can’t Make A Friend, Do Not Make An Enemy,”
    Your Words I Find Difficult To Follow Mentally,
    Perhaps It Is The Plight Of The Young Man Within Me,
    The Angst, The Confusion And All Things Lemony,
    Your Last Advice Was That My Chance Would Come Soon,
    And When It Comes, I Must Rise Up And Not Gloom,
    I Know That I Can’t List All Of Your Success And The Steps,
    But Like You Used To Say “Life Is An Ongoing Process.”

    NNAMDI JERMAINE CAREW

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    Voting ends October 4, 2024 11:59pm

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    • I am so sorry for your loss. A person can truly change us and improve us in so many different ways. I loved all of the examples you gave of lessons you learned from your loved one because it puts into perspective how much a singular person can affect another. Life IS an ongoing process and it’s hard to not get sucked into the past and start…read more

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  • Dear God, it’s me, Janet

    Dear God,

    It’s internally overwhelming dealing with death. It’s like going out to dinner with 7 people at a table. You’re all aughing, smiling, enjoying that meal because it’s filled with love and it’s seasoned well. Your meal is over and it’s time to go back home, but then one of you don’t get back in the car. Your family is in the car and you watch the other family member stand outside the car. You wave to them and you become sad. It’s now 6 of you in the car driving back home in silence and confusion. You have to put that key in the door, open it and go up to that room where that person is no longer coming home to get in that bed. “Is this real?”

    Reality hits and now you are sad. You’re crying, hyperventilating, and your brain is racing. You ask yourself “What just happened?” “Wait, wait, did I just leave my loved one at the restaurant and watch them walk off into the fog? “Maybe, I was dreaming?” You realized that you’re not. “Are they ever coming back?” “Who told tthem to go off into the fog like that?” You grab your phone to call them and hope they will pick up. RING…. RING….RING.. RING…

    You hear something, as if someone picked up… “You have reached the voicemail of Pablo Joshua, please leave a message after the tone” “Dad, dad, are you there?” …BEEEEP…….. “Dad, please pick up, it’s me, Janet”. “Dad, can you hear me?” Then……Cancer, he answers. “No, your father is not here anymore, but you can speak to him at anytime”……silence…… more silence… more hyperventilating…..more heartache.. tears fall profusively…

    “Hello, cancer, you really took him? Cancer, you son of a bitch! “

    You really took him away from me, away from all of us??”…Who invited you into our lives?”.

    You grab your chest because you can’t breathe. You even think, “maybe I should go back to that restaurant and join him in the fog”.

    No, you can’t do that!

    Its’s morning. I hear calypso music playing. The sun is up. I just don’t smell Johnny Cakes. I wish I did.

    My dad is in my house and I see him everyday. I hear his voice, his fingers snapping, and his feet tapping to Hall & Oates.

    (Music playing…lyrics are in tune)….
    “You’re a rich girl, and you’ve gone too far
    cause you know it don’t matter anyway…
    You can rely on the old man’s money..
    You can rely on the old man’s money..”

    I walk down my steps and I see him. I smile. “Look at him, having a ball”, feeling the music in his soul. His eyes are closed and he is smiling. I see it. Look, at him. It’s my youngest son. His face is just like his. His soul is just like his. It’s beautiful to see. He’s my fathers twin.

    I go down another flight of stairs and look at my dad, laughing and talking on the phone. Its my dads laugh so distinctively. It’s my oldest son. He’s my dads other twin.

    I’m out at a restaurant and it’s music playing. I hear my dad speaking and playing his favorite tunes. I stop short, look up and smile. It’s him. There he is, being an amazing DJ that he loves to be. The voice on the mic and that’s Pablo’s voice. It’s, my brothers voice. He is such a great DJ, just like my dad. He makes his sets and send them out to people so they can enjoy and feel the love for music just like he taught us.

    Wait! Just wait a minute, look at my dad out there on the dance floor. He loves two stepping to the music. I hear Anita Baker, Kenny G, and calypso king, Arrow. You can tell he feels the music with every step he takes. It’s My little brother and he is out dancing and smiling on the dance floor, just like my dad.

    I hear sports playing, it’s loud. I use to wish he would turn that down. I hear the commentary. He’s watching sports. and now he’s broadcasting live from the station. Who would have thought that Dad? I know you are so proud of your baby boy. My youngest brother is the sportscaster. He is my dads other twin.

    I see and hear my dad all the time. I’m blessed. I’m grateful. He lives in me everyday, he lives in my sons and my brothers.

    God, my father taught me all about music.
    He lived and breathed music. All genres!

    What more could I ask for? God, his spirit is never leaving my house. You were right. I want to thank you God. I want to thank you for taking my dad and putting his soul at peace. As much as I said, I wish he was here for this or that… he is., and he multiplied.

    Thank you!
    Love Tiny!

    P.S., please let my dad know, that I miss him and his legacy of music and sports will live on forever.

    Wait, I can just tell him myself.
    Good night!

    Rest in peace to my dad, Pablo E Joshua 1/25/48 to 4/16/18

    Janet Joshua

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    Voting ends October 4, 2024 11:59pm

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    • Janet, I am so sorry for your loss. Losing someone in that way can be so challenging to cope with. Your dad loved you so much and will always be with you!! The little things you said like sports and music will be there to remind you of his presence. I am so glad you worked through this hard time and have become a better person because of it.

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      • Thank you so much Harper. I really appreciate your feedback. Loosing someone changes you internally and externally. Music is my life because of my dad. My son wants to produce music because he loves it like my dad. I love to see the joy in the music that my sons and my brothers have. It brings’ me joy. Thanks for reading.

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    • Aww, Janet, I am so sorry for your loss. The way you describe your grief at the top of the piece is so powerful and heart-wrenching.I am sorry for the loss of your dad. I always noticed – especially at our open mic – how you included music in your poetry. Now I understand why! You definitely have your dad in you. Sending hugs. Thanks for sharing!…read more

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      • Thank you so much Lauren. I was trying to paint the picture of what I was actually seeing in my mind and feeling. Thank you so much for this outlet!

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  • In Your Absence

    Today marks another day since you’ve been gone.
    There is no significance to this day. It is not our anniversary or your birthday. It is not some mile marker in the countdown since your death.
    Today is just a day.
    But some days the weight of grief is as heavy as the mid-September air was on those days as you were leaving us. So long and yet so fast. In those days and the days that followed, time stood still and the world spun out of control all at the same time in a way I didn’t know was possible. To be honest, I’m not sure it has stopped.
    In your absence I have learned that grief is a stealth warrior and some days it wins before I even know the battle has begun.

    I wonder if you watch from wherever you are.
    Sometimes I wonder if you’re anywhere.
    And I try to find some semblance of you everywhere.
    I look back at old pictures and old posts and I wonder how we would have felt if we had known what was coming. I wonder if we would have appreciated those moments more, or if we would have been too wrapped up in worrying about the ending.
    I wonder what you’d think about all that has happened since you’ve been gone. I wonder if you feel the joy and the pain. How would you feel about all of the shifts and changes, the twists and turns, the bumps and the bruises that we’ve endured along the way? Would you shake your head at the mistakes and missteps we’ve made as we’ve tried to move in some manner that resembles moving forward. Or does your vantage point now give you some insight into how all the pieces will fall together?
    I wonder if you would be happy that life has gone on.
    In your absence I have learned that there are infinite questions and inadequate answers.
    And I am learning to accept that.

    I took the kids to Disney last year.
    I conquered my fear of flying (sort of) and flew all the way to California. The ocean is absolutely beautiful!
    I got a passport. I promise I’m going to use it!
    I spent a little too much on new furniture for the deck. And a lot too much on a new purse for me.
    I’ve settled into my new job. You were right. I’m doing great at it.
    I’m really sorry about how I’ve let the yard go. I’m trying, but you know that was always your thing.
    I try to get the kayaks out as much as I can. I find so much peace in the beauty of nature. And of course, I think of you whenever I catch a glimpse of a sunset.
    I appreciate my family and friends in ways I never did before.
    I’ve made new friends and reconnected with some old ones.
    I’ve fallen in love again.
    In your absence I have learned that there is truth in cliché phrases like “life is short” and “you only live once” and “tomorrow is not promised.”

    I have learned so much in your absence. Yet no matter how much I learn, there will always be one thing that I will never understand…
    Why.

    B.J. Pierce

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    Voting ends October 4, 2024 11:59pm

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    • Barbara, I am so sorry for your loss. Losing someone so close to you can be so difficult to cope with. Don’t feel guilty for not knowing how to do things that you didn’t do before, it’s all a learning experience and it will soon fall into place. I am happy that you are coming to terms with the loss you have faced and making the best out of a sad…read more

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  • Dead Air

    You were always on my side
    You were my joy; I was your pride
    In this cruel world, just us vs. them,
    But all good things come to an end
    Now I’m left here all alone
    With that final goodbye,
    My life shattered in the blink of an eye
    Lost like an orphaned fawn,
    How can I ever carry on
    Without the only friend I’ve ever known?

    Let the wires cross
    Let the signal be lost
    My thoughts erratic,
    Lost in the radio static
    Now that you’re not there
    Make no mistake
    There’s no return from this break
    No time to dwell on loss,
    Here’s my heart signing off,
    Fading into dead air

    So I’ll reset that emotional dial
    And face it all with a smile,
    Let this world strike me down
    I’ll never show them a frown
    As I try to live by your advice
    With the tools you gave in hand,
    Here and now I make my stand
    Forgive me for not growing strong
    Enough in time to right your wrongs
    But it will not happen twice!

    Let them know our pain
    Let the chaos rain
    From the heavens above
    As they say, in war and love
    Everything is fair
    If I must cross this line
    I’ll stand up for what’s mine
    Now there’s no turning back
    As the scene cuts to black,
    Fading into dead air

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    • Wow, what a beautiful poem. Death can affect us in so many ways. When you love a person so much, it shows when you lose them. Many people take others for granted and once they are gone they are left with lots of guilt. You can still improve your life without this loved one. Know that they would have wanted you to keep moving on with your life and…read more

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  • 65 Days

    Dear Unsealers,

    Below you will find an attempt at wording the way grief slowed my heart in 2022. Two of my male cousins (sons of each of my mother’s sisters) passed 65 days apart from one another. Their spirits continue to inspire me to rise above and push forward with every day. I outlived both of them this year. Raw emotion has been the extent of coherent writing I could come up with. The rest has only been able to formulate through dreaming. Thank you for reading:

    Where do I begin?
    I’ve laughed a lot of it to the side; I’ve become hallowed to some of it, and the rest just lies right underneath the surface.
     
    Underneath my tired, malfunctioning, fragile brain, I begin wrapping up my thoughts, since I just almost doze off because that’s what happens when I get deep, introspective, or reflective; my psyche overthinks and overheats, then shuts down. I’ve been wanting to write a poem, but this happens. It’s like ever since my cousin died, writer’s block has clogged my ability to speak, let alone breathe. It’s like I’m losing a game of being choked out, and sometimes I don’t want to tap out ‘cause the bruises never fade [cuz… the bruises never fade].
     
    Instead, I’m back in the simulation of quote-unquote reality, facing this day-to-day, stumbling all throughout, like, “What can i-i-i help you with today?”

    Maybe all my poems start with questions… or they have to be written when I’m pressed against the wall, so my thoughts just get to spilling, and when I’m asked how I’m feeling, really all I want to do is (exhale), because it makes me feel so small to carry on with all this damage.
     
     
    I’m revisiting this poem for the third time ‘cause the last time I tried to get through it, another one of my cousins died, and his name is M, and I rep them boys proudly. It’s V and M ‘til the day I see cloudy.
     
    I’m still not understanding how one day we can be standing together, and the next I’m faceplantin’ talking memories we were planning to the graves they’ve been planted in. *umh* Where do I go from here?

    I’m even further away from writing my first love poem. Well, in this state, loss love underlies sadness, and in moments coupled with lack thereof, it can feel like a heart of attacks. The type that boils over, no explosion.
     
    You know they say, “You don’t really start living until you’re 25,” and when I think of my heavenly halves, I’d argue that saying is a living lie.

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    • Kaisha, I am so sorry for your loss. Losing someone so close to you is never easy. Even though they are gone, the memories you made with them will live on forever. And you will continue to make more memories now and in the future! Stay strong ♥

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    • Kai, your story brought tears to my eyes. Losing loved ones is difficult. I am 75 this month. So many people I knew are gone. Want to pick the phone call my Poppa Big Vic and say hey poppa I wrote a new song today.

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  • Author of the Black Da Vinci

    You are the run-on sentence
    English has taught me not to use.
    The Punctuation with red lines of knowledge
    as I fail to convey thoughts of expression.
    And yet, I recall the Afro-Fusion in your tone,
    the fineness in your smile exiled from Black Culture.
    The admiration of the necessary things, like catching
    each syllable like butterflies in my stomach, when you
    reach a unique journey that shifts you into my favorite Icon.

    Even now your observations are penned to memory,
    ultimately growing to term like my daughter
    being born from the love you gave me.
    Each lesson is a precise section that supports
    and conclude your life’s purpose.

    Your thoughts live on through every misspelled
    word in my chapter of being as you watch over me, circling
    and underlining my faults. Somehow still levitating your
    suggestions in marginal explanations of my highest lows and
    my deepest concerns of my soul.

    You are the warmest period I’ve seen
    in the English language. Always about the rules
    of storytelling and yet basically used your criteria
    for this kind of short story. Your creativity is the reason my
    masterpiece for poetry is written like a master manuscript.
    Every detailed piece included reading within a hero’s
    pilgrimage. This is the message you gave how to approach
    my failures and yet never give up on my story.

    Rashan Speller

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    • Rashan, this is BEAUTIFUL. I am so sorry for your loss; however, your interpretation and outlook are inspiring and positive! Loss can be such a sad and negative thing, but when you think about how much love was exchanged between the two of you, along with all the lessons you learned from the person, it sheds a very bright light on the sorrowful…read more

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      • Thank you it’s still been hard my grandfather was really like my best friend more then anyone else could be but I stay connected with all the moments and lessons he taught me.

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        • Again, I am so sorry for your loss. I know this is hard for you, but you will get through this. Remember the good times. ♥

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  • To My Grandma

    Grandma,
    Last time we drove to the Tri-Cities in Washington for a family reunion, I still cried because I miss you! We all had a lovely time together- all your three kids, and eight grandchildren, and twelve great-grandchildren. For thirty-five years of my life, you and Grandpa were always there. You are like a missing puzzle piece now. The picture will never be the same again, and nothing can make it better. We decided to drive by your old house in the mobile home park. I have such fond memories of all us cousins squished together in that little living room. I remember your chocolate pies, and your hand breaded chicken strips, and your cheesy corn flake potatoes. We would play the game of Life at your tiny kitchen table, or take turns trying out the exercise bike in your bedroom, or play jump rope in the yard. I remember your big snack cupboard, and how you would give zip lock bags to us and let us fill them up with Cheeseballs and Licorice, and fruit snacks. I remember that you and Grandpa always loved Raisin Bran cereal and you always had an extra container full of raisins in your cupboard so we could load up our bowls with extra raisins after pouring our cereal. You had such a beautiful rose garden at your house. How you loved your flowers! When we drove by recently, there was no garden left at all. It clearly was not your house anymore.
    The last time I saw you alive, you were living in an adult foster care home. Grandpa was there too, struggling with Alzheimer’s. I remember you showed us your room in the front of the house, with a big picture window. You said the cook told you that you could still do baking, and you still enjoyed making pies sometimes. You had all our pictures up on one of your walls- chubby, smiling great grand-babies, wedding photos of your grand-daughters, family portraits of your sons and daughters with their children. I was glad to see your room and to picture where you lived, but it was hard to see you somewhere other than your house. We said we loved each other and hugged like always, my eyes heavy with tears. We didn’t want to leave yet, but we had to because we had a six-hour drive to get back home a state away with our two young children.
    The next time we visited that care home, you had already passed away very unexpectedly. I kept thinking perhaps I was just imagining that you had died as I glanced in your room and saw your hairbrush on the dresser. I felt like I might be floating around in some kind of dream, like I was just watching myself. We all went down the hall to see Grandpa, who was barely hanging on. By the end of the weekend, we had a joint funeral for both of you. My uncle shared that he felt some relief Grandpa went too shortly after you because he couldn’t bear the thought of Grandpa starting to forget you too- his beloved wife of 60 years! The weight of this loss hung on me like a heavy garment. I wanted to get out from under it, yet I needed it. If I let go of the sadness, would I let go of you? I was mad at everyone for even being able to smile. I never really got to say goodbye to you, Grandma!
    What would I have said to you if I knew you were dying? I would have said thank you for your open arms and open heart to me. Thank you for the hand embroidered kitchen towels. Thank you for the little purple rocking chair you sent over for my baby girl. Thank you for the way you worshipped God and taught me the hymns. Thank you for the big family Christmas dinners, the summer evenings by the lake at family camp. Thank you for listening with excitement when I called you about my fiancé. Thank you for how you welcomed him into the family as if you had always known him. Thank you for making the long trip over to my baby shower. Thank you for your sweet words to my preschooler when she showed you her ballerina twirls over and over again. Thank you for the anniversary and birthday cards year after year. I have these in a box with your careful cursive handwriting telling us how much you love us, how much you pray for us. I need you to know that I love you and that I will never forget you! I will share you and Grandpa with my children and you will always live on in my life!

    Love, Jo

    JoAnne Strong Bowles

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    • JoAnne, this is so sweet. I am so sorry for the loss of your grandmother. I am so glad that you can look back and be happy about all of the memories that you made. It sounds like you and your grandma had a very close and loving relationship. She seemed like she was such a nice lady, I would have loved to meet her. ♥

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  • Dear Lil Brother

    Lil Bro,

    I constantly think of you and apologize. I don’t feel liable; I just don’t know how to accept my lack of knowledge. ‘I’m sorry,’ my heart whispers, ‘because I never realized there would be a day when you weren’t here.’

    Your birthday passed last month. Someone signed their name on a document at work and scribbled your birthday on the next line, just a date in June. But I heard your childhood voice in my head repeating the date with pride. It was your very own special day. I could hear the way you stress the long ‘u’ sound in our AAE dialect from home. The memory shattered any composure I had left.

    My sobs were silent but insuppressible. I sat at my desk as tears rushed over my face. I didn’t want attention, but I’m sure my manager noticed me wiping my eyes continuously.

    I always thought I would share this time with you, optimistically wrestling to become the adults we always wanted to be. I thought we would gossip and laugh over the years. I thought we would grow and learn from each other. I was an adult when you left, but losing you makes me feel as feeble and naive as a child. I never understood that your illness could be fatal. I never thought the procedure could be dangerous. I never imagined my life without knowing you. But here we are, and all three of those things are unrelentingly real. ‘I miss you. I’ve needed you all this time.’

    As I looked at the document, it was unbelievable to me that you would have turned 29 years old that day. It had been seven years without you, and a part of me loathed that so much time had passed. It reminded me of all the changes since you’ve gone. How can so much have changed when it feels like just yesterday that you were here?

    How do I forgive myself for my oblivious nescience all our lives? Why didn’t I realize the depth of your suffering? Why couldn’t you make it clearer to me? Why didn’t I have the words or the vocabulary to verbalize your experience? Why didn’t my mother explain what was going on with my brother? Why couldn’t I fully sympathize? ‘I’m sorry,’ my soul screams.

    There’s a young guy who works with me at my job. He’s not a lot like you, but in ways, he reminds me of you and Bee when we were kids. He doesn’t always understand me when I mumble in our dialect, but we use AAE and it feels like home.

    He’s not bothersome like you were toward me, but I know you annoyed me because I was your big sister. I was yours, and my attention belonged to you. He would also never be as insulting as you. In the moment your insults are insufferable, but now it’s something I miss the most. You would always come to our defense if anyone ever put us down. He’s not moody like you used to be from time to time. You and I share a certain level of disdain for obnoxious social interactions. But now I wonder if some of your moods were because of your pain…

    Of course, my coworker is not you, but he makes me think of you every day. He listens to the music you’d like to hear, and he likes some clothes you’d probably wear.

    He also looks at me the way you and Bee do when I do something cool, like the smartest big sister in the world.

    I’m the nerdy one, the studious sister. I’m blind sometimes to the things you’re engrossed in. But you and Bee look up to me. You’re proud of me for getting good grades and graduating college. You’re proud of me for traveling the world and learning new languages. You’d probably commend me today if you saw the program I built in Excel for work using complex formulas and macro automation. My coworker loves it.

    I wish you were here to see it too, to visit me and see the city, to listen to my goals and dreams. And I would encourage you in yours.

    But even if you’re not here, I will live with all my heart like you are. I won’t only be the sister you needed, but I will be a sister to anyone who needs it.

    We were together from the beginning, and you always believed in me. You were my first fan. You never judged me or wanted me to change. You always welcomed me with a hug and a smile. To anyone in my life, I will encourage, support, and strengthen them like a true sister should. Thank you for being my childhood little brother.

    Robyn Robb

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    • Robyn, I am so sorry for the loss of your brother. As a big sister, this made me emotional. You always see them as an annoying little kid following you around and copying everything that you do. Even though they bother me a lot, I don’t know what my life would be like without them. Your words inspire me to love my family always and never take them…read more

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      • Harper!! Thank you so much for your kind message. Thank you for reading. It’s certainly not easy to always be the strong person I want to be for others. But it is a great pleasure to hear that I could be an inspiration to you and people like you. Thanks again 🙏🏽💕

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        • You are so welcome. I am happy to relate to it and make you feel less alone in this tough situation you have been put in. You will get through this ♥

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  • "Finding Life in Your Death"

    Dear Niece,

    A mother’s gain, an aunt’s loss is what I experienced having you in my life and losing you. You became my third but oldest child. Having you in my household was so fulfilling to my soul. To see you smile and the gloom and fear in your eyes disappear was everything. I could feel the burden of your spirit lift off you, as I consumed it and carried it. I wanted to fulfill your desires to live with me permanently but I had been denied the opportunity. The sadness and depression I had when taking you home after the summer you spent with me, had not even scratched the surface of the pain I felt, losing you forever. Your passing taught me how to call on Jesus and TRUST in GOD when I have nothing left inside of me to grasp, to survive. To stay sane, I have accredited so many things to you in your passing as positive changes in my life.

    Your organ donations impacted the lives of 6 people; which inspired me to make a difference in this world. Your one body gave way to 6 lives, to live and not die, to be able to be healthy or healed. You leaving at the tender age of 14 taught me TO LIVE NOW, because life had ended for you before it even truly began. So, two months after your passing I officially moved to the Coast. It was a profound moment because I had told you on our visit here, that I would bring you with me if I ever moved. Well baby I didn’t get to bring you physically but I have you in my heart, I have your school artwork hung up in my home, and the flower I was given at your funeral is still living, that gives me joy.

    I wonder where you’d be and what you’d be doing, often I answer, “She would be doing EVERYTHING!” that inspires me to continue to keep pushing, keep fulfilling my dreams, take in the moment, and never take life for granted; never think there is always time because the loss of you taught me time is truly of the essence. I can feel your presence at times and I pray that you are proud that I chose to give it to God, the anger, the hurt, the guilt, the grief, and all that surrounded taking that loss not from the natural but by the hands of a 15-year-old. Life hadn’t prepared me beforehand but yet on the spot to FORGIVE QUICKLY! Hatred can destroy the good in people and I knew the good in you would have prevailed. It was too painful to process a child I love, taking the life of a child I love but that taught me how to GIVE IT TO GOD, vengeance is not mine. Love conquers a multitude of things and the love you gave me, I shared it in the moments that needed mending.

    Even in loving your mom through it all and until the end, I discovered the true meaning of God’s grace and mercy and how sufficient it truly is. So thank you my sweet niece for teaching me about life within your short life. Your memories and everything I can imagine you would have become, I will become because you were simply amazing. Your mom told me after you passed, that you once told her, “She’s not my cousin, my aunt but MY MOM” and that if she would take your clothes to my house and place them on the porch, I’d know you were coming home. I wish that could be so but God needed you back. But, no matter the distance, from Earth to the highest Heaven, your spirit will always be home within my soul.

    L. Sunshine Lewis

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    • I am so sorry for your loss. I can’t even imagine being in your shoes, that must have been so difficult to cope with. I love the part where you said that she would be doing everything! This makes me want to always be active and never waste a moment!! I am so happy that you had such a close relationship with her and have so many good memories to…read more

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    • I am so sorry for your loss. It is so tough to lose a life so young – especially in such a horrific and senseless way. It sounds like you are honoring her life in a beautiful that would make her happy. And it also sounds like you brought so much love, joy, and happiness to her life. I am sure you can still feel her all around. Thank you for…read more

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  • alibakes submitted a contest entry to Group logo of Write a letter or poem to or about a loved one who passed away and share how they inspire youWrite a letter or poem to or about a loved one who passed away and share how they inspire you 2 months, 2 weeks ago

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    Little Miss PickleChip

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  • root

    n the forest of memory,
    where time weaves its tapestry,
    A sapling once stood—its roots seeking eternity.
    Its leaves whispered secrets to the wind,
    a fragile plea,
    As it stretched toward the sun, yearning to be free.

    Life’s storms battered its tender bark,
    yet it stood firm,
    Each scar a testament to resilience,
    a lesson learned.

    In the quiet dark of night,
    Across a lonely track,
    Shadows stretch like memories,
    and the moon scowls back.
    My heart, a heavy burden,
    Carrying the weight of loss,

    weeping willow,
    there’s much to be erased,
    but who am i to cry,
    when i’ve never felt your skin,
    i’ve never seen your face

    darnel

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    • This poem is so beautifully tragic, I am so sorry for your loss. The strength and pain that floods this poem is breathtaking and would love to read more poetry by you. Your verses are simple yet haunting and really touched my heart.

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    • You have such a beautiful way with words. Please know no matter what you feel, your feelings are always valid. Thank you for sharing. I am so sorry for your loss. Sending hugs. <3 Lauren

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  • A Friendly Lesson

    I’m a big guy,
    But his hand swallowed mine whole
    As he greeted me when we first met.
    I would end up marrying his little sister.
    As an only child,
    I was thrilled to be part of a larger family,
    Even if one of my brothers-in-law
    Could crush me like a grape.
    He was a mountain of a man
    With a booming voice
    And a hearty laugh.
    A gentle giant living alone.
    Never married.
    Never dated much.
    He certainly had friends,
    But his family knew he wanted more.
    A special someone
    To ease his loneliness.
    Not that I’m all that special,
    But I should have done more with him,
    As family and a friend.
    Correction, anything with him.
    I never reached out.
    We were close to the same age.
    I am sure we could have found common ground.
    As I ruminate to the point of distraction,
    My wife throws me a lifeline.
    She mentions my career, children, friends, hobbies.
    Although I had no time for her brother,
    She suggests I wasn’t a bad guy.
    Just busy.
    She’s so sweet.
    I’m fortunate she loves me.
    I pretend to buy her argument
    And return to my rumination.
    When he got sick,
    I finally did reach out
    And took him to some of his appointments.
    The doctors gave him time,
    But they couldn’t give him health.
    And then, poof!
    He was gone.
    Just like that,
    Never to return.
    Like a bad magic trick where the playing card,
    Torn to pieces by the magician,
    Never reappears whole again.
    My brother-in-law left behind
    Memories I consider incomplete,
    For they should be more abundant and eventful.
    Like the time we should have gone bowling,
    Or to the movies,
    Or just hung out together.
    I’m grateful he left me something.
    A lesson.
    To reach out.
    To connect.
    To make memories.
    To be a better friend.

    James Flanigan

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    • Whenever we lose someone within our inner circle, the first thing people tend to do is ask “What if”. I know I have done it and the people around me have done it too. As hard as it is, you can’t ruminate on what wasn’t done. Cherish the moments you did have and don’t punish yourself for the moments you didn’t. He sounded great and you do too.

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  • To My Beloved Husband

    Dear Husband,
    I miss you every single moment of every single day.
    I miss your laugh, your smile and your love for me and our kids.
    You continue to inspire me every single day to press on no matter how difficult the struggle may seem.
    No matter how tough things got, you would not give up.
    You took on me and my 2 kids after the divorce from my 1st marriage.
    You loved them as your own.
    Then came my mother into the fold, whom you lovingly took in as your own mother.
    My family became your family, my mother became your mother and eventually my God be amen your God.
    You continue to inspire our son to become the Eagle scout he wants to be.
    You started him on that path years ago and like you, he will not give up on his dreams.
    Thank you for continuing to inspire our family.
    Your life, full of military service in the Navy and full of love and a legacy of never giving up will always inspire us.
    You were and always will be the love of my life, my soul mate and my twin flame.
    You ran the race and you gained your crown. Your reward in this earth was great but your reward of eternal life in Heaven is greater.
    You inspire me to keep running the race to press on until I see you again in Heaven someday.
    Love, your best friend, your soul mate, your twin flame.

    Kimberly Zeches

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    • I cannot imagine what it is like to lose your twin flame and wish you all the best going forward. He sounded like a wonderful man who loved you dearly and I am sure he is looking down on you right now with a big smile on his face and love in his heart.

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  • My Trinity of Wise Women

    I’m suddenly aware of frigid air;
    A chill to my very core.
    It’s only been a few months,
    I miss you mom.
    This is a cold I’ve never felt before,
    Rising up behind me-
    …. the air is compelling.
    It shines, the air is in my sight.

    Aunt Lisa, you taught me-
    To see differently, to be different.
    You two showed me the beauty of I…
    Grandma, two decades since you were here.
    I can feel your smile and smell Gardenia.
    In your bed mom,
    time itself stopped.
    I cannot sit here much longer.
    I scrub the bathtub,
    I’ve always hated wet hair.
    Yet I saw an orange strand or two,
    I set them aside,
    As the unfamiliar air continued to rise.
    Rise above expectations-
    Rise above the concept of perfection.
    This air is so refreshing,
    Cold breeze in a hot and muggy night.
    I can feel the support,
    A love more than unconditional.
    Unbreakable, unshakeable.
    An unfamiliar & unwavering support.
    Personal- I feel the tears
    They fall as I write,
    So, as long as there’s fresh air,
    I will continue to rise.

    Mom, it’s been seventy days,
    Since you took yourself away.
    I feel my lost idols,
    In my heart and around my neck.
    Heaven sent pearls-
    Of beauty and wisdom adorn me.
    I watch the irredescent bubbles,
    The heat of the water,
    Contrast of cold air.
    Mom I’ll honor your words,
    I shan’t give into despair.

    – Hillary Rosenthal

    Hillary Rosenthal

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    • I remember the hardest part of losing my Grandfather was finding his things everywhere. A hat, some clothing, golf clubs, things that I couldn’t use but I couldn’t throw away. I am sorry for your loss and for the pain you feel right now. It will get better, eventually, the pain will become more bittersweet. I wish the best for you.

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    • Hillary, I am so incredibly sorry for your loss. Your words are heartfelt and beautiful. Keep taking each day one at a time. Your mom and aunt are so proud of you. Sending you lots and lots of hugs. <3 Lauren

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  • crstanger1911 submitted a contest entry to Group logo of Write a letter or poem to or about a loved one who passed away and share how they inspire youWrite a letter or poem to or about a loved one who passed away and share how they inspire you 2 months, 2 weeks ago

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    When I Woke Up and You Went to Sleep.

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  • Goodbyes

    Are we filled with mourning, filled with grief
    When branches release their last brown leaf
    Are we filled with anguish, filled with woe
    When the sun melts the last cindered snow

    Seasons are a blended transition
    “One day”s coming into fruition
    And so is this life into the next
    Letting go, while clutching to our chest
    Like a dainty rose held too tightly
    Watching the soft petals fall lightly
    What we know, clouded by what we feel
    So why does this goodbye seem so real

    Are we filled with mourning, filled with grief
    When the branches bud their first green leaf
    Are we filled with anguish, filled with woe
    When the sun brings songs of the sparrow

    This is not the end, but your rebirth
    Disappearing seed into the earth
    Promised beauty after the stillness
    Remaining joy despite the illness
    We pull you close as we let you go
    Goodnight kiss and, “See you tomorrow”
    What we know, clouded by what we feel
    So why do goodbyes feel so real

    Melodee Moore

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    • The last thing my Grandmother said to me before she passed was “Until we see each other again”. She knew she was dying and so did I, but she left me with that beautiful message that I carry around with me always. As hard as it is now, we will see each other again.

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