When Alcohol Was Not Your Mother
Posted: Sat Nov 27, 2004 12:19 am
Poem for Terry McGovern
Laid down in the snow and you let go ~
left your skin in one last swallow,
one last cry, one last memory of a time
when alcohol was not your mother,
when you could hold yourself
all night long, and not once feel alone.
Strange, how years disappear.
How love fails us, haunts us,
how lost children live within us,
always crying, always wanting mother,
and we cannot blot out their voices.
Always these babies trying to call us back.
And how long do we listen?
How long do we promise them,
before we just don't hear them anymore?
Terry, tell me how to find that snowbank.
Tell me how it feels to collapse
on a cold night, to lay your coat aside,
and clutch the peace within the glass.
Tell me it doesn't hurt
when the last breath turns white
and travels to the sky.
Hillary Hays
1994
Laid down in the snow and you let go ~
left your skin in one last swallow,
one last cry, one last memory of a time
when alcohol was not your mother,
when you could hold yourself
all night long, and not once feel alone.
Strange, how years disappear.
How love fails us, haunts us,
how lost children live within us,
always crying, always wanting mother,
and we cannot blot out their voices.
Always these babies trying to call us back.
And how long do we listen?
How long do we promise them,
before we just don't hear them anymore?
Terry, tell me how to find that snowbank.
Tell me how it feels to collapse
on a cold night, to lay your coat aside,
and clutch the peace within the glass.
Tell me it doesn't hurt
when the last breath turns white
and travels to the sky.
Hillary Hays
1994