When you visit an old One in the Care Home
it’s not much fun;
not so beautiful to clap eyes on frames
and hunchbacks;
the lady with a dress riding too high
boo-hooing
and Aunt’s intensity ‘You don’t know what it’s like for me.
No one does.’
But up there on the incessant flat screen,
bright as a galaxy, the Beijing Olympics,
team GB, greatest achievement,
UK athletes (all that gold)
with medals, anthems, shining faces,
thighs and torso, smoothly dolphin,
all the family proud as Punch
and the nation pleased as Punch
so I turn,
sever Auntie’s gaze,
when only two dimensions
grab me more than starving eyes
and it makes her cry;
that I look away.
gave me a little shiver, uah.
ReplyDeletea make-me-think post
ReplyDeleteGreat depictation. Too great. Reminds me of those awful days spent with my father in a nursing home.
ReplyDeleteMy grandmother had Alzheimers and was in a special home. We would visit weekly. You just took me there - again.
ReplyDeletehmm. pausing.
ReplyDeletespeachless, but love the poems and love my elders!
ReplyDeleteGreat Poem,we shouldn't fear ageing.We should respect it and not worship false Gold.
ReplyDeleteThought provoking. I recently did an hour of poetry reading to residents at a care home for elderly people in varying stages of dementia. So rewarding to see the engagement of so many. Memories of schooldays were awakened and one lady kept repeating "oh I did enjoy that!". I have been invited back in the new year. Please visit the sick and lonely. All they want is a little time.
ReplyDelete