Love, Memories, Poetry

still flying those night flights

This is a poem to remember August evenings, summer, travel, dreams, hope, death, grief, rebirth, longing, flight, sunsets, and my mother’s imagination and spirit which live on in me and which I hope will infect/inspire anyone who reads this and the words that follow.

 

still flying those night flights

copyright @2017 by punkie

three days before

the first anniversary

of my mother’s death,

i still fly the

night flights

to london

at sunset,

they leave

disappearing streaks

across darkening skies

like shooting stars

i watch later

after dusk

is just

a memory

and still i cry

every time

probably

always

will

 

The earlier poem is here.

© 2017 Susan Macaulay. I invite you to share this link widely, but please do not reprint or reblog or copy and paste my poems into other social media without my permission. Thank you.

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Love, Memories, Poetry

night flights to london

On an August night in 2015, as I ate supper on the porch of the house I rented at the time, I glimpsed a white line above the sunset horizon. A tsunami of emotion swept through me and I began to cry. It was one of those chest-heaving, choking kinds of cries, the ones accompanied by lots of fat rolling tears.

I was reminded of the many summer evenings Mom and I had sat on the deck at the back of her big red brick house on the hill eating salad made with greens fresh from her garden. A steady stream of night flights to Europe invariably flew overhead as we dined. She always remarked on the planes, and when the dementia began to take hold each one of the dozen or so that crossed the twilight sky became the one to London, the one I would take when I left to go back to Dubai.

In the years before my 2011 return to Canada, I spoke with Mom almost daily on the phone. At the end of every call she would ask me when I was coming “home.”  If my visit was imminent, she would be ecstatic: “I can’t wait to see you!” Otherwise she would rue: “Oh. Not before then? I’d hoped it would be sooner…

When I saw the stream of vapour on that August night in 2015, I was flooded with sadness for all the times she must have looked to the sky when I wasn’t there, thought of me and prayed for my safe return. I imagined all the times, as the dementia progressed, that she was terrified to be alone in the big house by herself.

Eventually she got her wish, but not in the way she would have wanted or expected. After the tears abated, I wrote this poem:

night flights to london

by punkie

tonight as i ate
shrimp salad on rye
i noticed the streak
of a jet in the sky

i choked on a thought
and started to cry:
“life! leave me alone,
let sleeping dogs lie.”

i remembered the days
when we supped in the back
with the sun sinking low
until all had turned black

we drank and we laughed
and we had a good crack
“look punkie,” you’d say
as you gave me some flack:

“there’s the night flight
to london up in the sky
i wonder who’s on it
for what, whom and why?

i wish we could go there,
do you think we might try
to travel afar one day
you and i?”

“that would be fun mom”
i agreed in reply
while i sipped on fine wine
with a tear in my eye

“we’ll go in september,”
i told a white lie,
“your birthday is then
and a ticket i’ll buy.”

a moment passed close
then a lifetime, then two
as we sat in the dusk
with the deer and the dew

we pretended in silence
our dreams might come true
how else could we manage
to make our way through?

“look punk, it’s there!
look up in the sky —
the night flight to london
that goes on to dubai

i can’t help but miss you
when i see it on high,
why can’t you just stay
right here by my side?”

god granted your wish
though not how you thought
dementia delivered it
then left us to rot

but we turned the tables
and twisted the plot
to find healing and joy
in the battles we fought

now it’s just me
with chablis and blue sky
my appetite lost for
shrimp salad on rye

i weep at white tails
of night flights that fly
all headed for london
then on to dubai

 

August, 2015

 

© Susan Macaulay 2015. I invite you to share this link widely, but please do not reprint or reblog or copy and paste my poems into other social media without my permission. Thank you.

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Family, Love, Tips, tools & skills

50 ways to love your mother

Mom and I November 11, 2014.

I’d been a daughter for 60 years when I wrote the list below with the help of friends and followers. You’d think I would have been and expert at it. Nope. I was still learning. Still exploring. Still discovering what it meant to me. The previous 10 years had changed the way I thought about daughterhood.

I asked friends and followers to share what it meant to them to be a “good daughter.” The diversity of their responses reminded me how individual our paths and relationships are. Inspired by their thoughts and Paul Simon’s tune 50 Ways to Leave Your Lover, I created a list of 50 Ways to Love Your Mother.

It would seem there is no one right way to be a good daughter. Only we can be the judge of our relationships.

50 Ways to Love Your Mother

  1. be caring, sensitive, and aware
  2. do well in school, don’t get into trouble with the law, stay clean and sober, don’t “sleep around” or have children out of wedlock
  3. know your daughterly duties and responsibilities
  4. question everything and be a rebel; question nothing and be a conformist
  5. keep in contact when you’re away
  6. do all you reasonably can lovingly
  7. take care of her when she’s sick
  8. understand her humanity and your own
  9. respect her wishes
  10. respect yourself
  11. advocate for her if she can’t advocate for herself
  12. do little things for her
  13. ensure she has good food, good shelter and good clothing
  14. care for her out of love, even when it’s not easy
  15. take what she taught you and build on it to become an extension of her with your own dreams, aspirations, and desires
  16. become a beautiful friend as well as a daughter
  17. stay close by her side to help her as much as you can
  18. travel far and wide to seek and find your own fortune
  19. be a good person
  20. understand neither of you is perfect
  21. forgive her and yourself
  22. grow into the person God meant you to be
  23. follow your heart’s desire and your dreams, and never forget who birthed you
  24. make her proud
  25. stick up for yourself and defend your rights
  26. stick up for her and defend her rights
  27. follow in her footsteps, replicate her life
  28. avoid making the same mistakes she did, lead a life unlike any she would have dreamed possible
  29. do stuff with her that brings her joy and pleasure
  30. protect yourself, even from her if need be
  31. know when to walk to away and know when to stay
  32. practice patience; practice more patience
  33. give her love and support when she needs it
  34. visit her regularly and spend quality time with her
  35. conquer your  fears
  36. share your joys and sorrows, laugh and cry with her
  37. speak your mind
  38. heal your wounds
  39. listen, listen, listen to her
  40. think, think, think for yourself
  41. see and appreciate her for who she is
  42. love yourself because of yourself and despite yourself
  43. be loyal and compassionate
  44. eat sensibly, call home and drive carefully
  45. be your own person; have your own life
  46. be a good girl; be a bad girl
  47. live purposefully and do your best
  48. get up and keep going after you fall or fail
  49. hold her hand when you cross the road
  50. tell great, funny and touching stories at her funeral

This is by no means an exhaustive list. What would your mother’s list for you look like? What would your list for your daughter(s) look like?

Thanks to these daughters who collectively have about 1,000 years’ experience as such for sharing their thoughts with me:

Sally M, Belinda B., Joan L., Tami Beth L., Alice J.D.Y., Mona N. Rosario V.B. Wyld H., Kathleen M., Sheila S., Helen J. M., Mary M., Joan L., Kathy B., Glenna C., Suzette S., Edith R., British D.S., Alice J. D. Y., Jan R., Kim A. S., Denise A., Siempre M., Stephanie R. J., Alison R., Rebecca B., Beverly D., Suzette S., Sally M., Kathy B., Debie O., Carolyn T., Molly C-K.

Thanks to Tami Beth L. for this particularly touching story. And oh yeah, thanks also to Paul Simon for helping us in our struggle to be free 🙂

https://myalzheimersstory.com/2015/11/16/joys-and-tears-these-last-three-years/

https://myalzheimersstory.com/2018/11/16/a-daughters-rendering-and-remembering/

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