The choice seemed consequential only
a week ago — would I finally get it right? —
remember that it was whole
wheat instead of multi and what kind of fancy swirl? —
but now I could pick the wrong one and it wouldn’t make any difference
at all. Except I can’t
for the life of me choose the loaf I should. Not now.
So I stand in the bread aisle like a sentenced
man deciding on my last meal, and trying to keep this decision
as simple as it ought to be
while the packages trick the eye with their redundancy,
each tie twisted so tightly it would take forever to open them up,
and the Christmas carol music keeps jingjingjing-a-linging
and the hurried moms
take their loaves from the shelves and can’t imagine
why someone isn’t doing this for me, isn’t taking care
of the chores and the meals and the million other
little things so I don’t have to be out
in the middle of all this, so I can just be home
where I belong, but do not want to be,
where loss multiplies in every room,
in the thousand things that are not
touched, and the footsteps that will not come
to greet me to see if maybe this time
I finally got the bread
right.
This is such a profound poem. Chimsky speaks so clearly about the confusion of loss.
Oh yes, this poem goes directly to a surprising aspect of losing a nuclear family member. One is simply astonished that others are continuing a brisk life on auto pilot while the mourner finds a simple routine act to be a rite rife with searing personal anguish.
It’s going to take me a while to pull myself up from the floor…
This hits so close to home and so powerfully. Thank you for this gift.