
I
He wanted mountains
as his final resting place:
climb and let me fly.
II
We climbed, ten,
The landscape open, no trees,
just empty and wide.
III
The black ashes fell up to the ground.
The sun remained in the sky.
IV
A camera captured
pieces.
All around earth rocks family
air.
V
Our conflicts dissolving
into suspended time,
breathing memories,
the connections blinding,
the future past.
VI
The shadow of inheritance.
The pull of familiarity.
Love crossed with contradiction,
no answers,
lost words,
absences
uncertain and unknown.

VII
O voice of silences
what would you say to us now?
Do you not seek the many questions
embedded in the reparations
we expect to find?
VIII
I know only murmurs
and the rhythm of searching.
But I know too
that death is involved
in what I know.
IX
When we came down from the mountain
our bodies flew,
scattered to many destinations.
X
At the sound of each day
and each day returning
we noted the discordant measure
of hours and years.
XI
He did not ask
for more time.
He did not seek miracles
or complain of cruelty.
He knew that all stories
have an end.
XII
Her mind departed
long before her heart failed.
XIII
We went back up the mountain.
It was different
and the same and the earth
the sky accepted anew
our darkest gift.

Joy has asked us this week at earthweal to talk about the first poems that helped you to find your own inner eye and voice, and write about it. I’m sure there were poems and poets that influenced me before Wallace Stevens, but none has been as central to me as his “Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird”. I’ve posted at least 4 variations of it, including one for earthweal.
But the poem above is the one that still cuts closest. The photos are cropped versions of panoramas composed by my older daughter from photos she took in the mountains of Arizona where my father requested that we spread his ashes. My mother did not make any request except to be cremated, but we managed to find the very same place to spread her ashes years later after her death. As I wrote in my original post: I’ve been thinking about my parents. My generation is becoming the elders now. I do not think we are prepared for it.