I held your
nightmares close
and we became
like old friends,
drinking
whiskies in rocking chairs
that my
grandfather carved
before religion
called him out
of the woods and
into the concrete, and
we raised our
glasses high and wild
whilst you
waltzed
through heaven
in your underwear
laughing at the
people below.
So I took a deep
syncopated
breath
to calm down the
tide of suicide dreams,
setting the
metronome
back to the
beginning of time,
soothing flowed
through me
as I held my
palms skyward
to the moon
and thanked her,
my sacred mistress,
who aided me
in remembering,
oh yes,
that part of me
is in
the trees
outside my house,
in the rain that
falls
into the rivers
and flows
to the Ireland
waters
from whence my
family came.
I am also deep
within the
earthen ground
which heals all wounds
and culture
imposed sins and
sighs to the
mourning morn
until laughter
cracks the sky
again
like thunder.
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