Tag: Disability

  • At The Funeral

    At The Funeral

    My daughter, Zuzu, died in 2004 at home in Sydney.

    The peace that flowed from her sleep

    Stopped suddenly

    In her bedroom near dawn.

    While I slept.

    There is a hall with a curtain and an oven

    For her body

    To lift away

    As smoke

    Into Sydney’s spectacular light.

    On the perfectly green lawn

    Of the modern crematorium

    Ice cold air filled with fire

    In the July winter sun.

    We were so deeply moved

    By your scared sacred kind wishes,

    Evaporating in front of us

    As we tried to survive the future.

    As she lay there, in the mortuary

    I brushed her hair

    As I often did before

    In her short beautiful life.

    Although her skull

    had been opened

    and emptied

    Her brain delivered to hope.

    I listened to other mourners

    Behind me talking about her life

    Because they knew her and loved her.

    (Her laughter was real once

    It had drifted away

    It had gone

    Imagine that

    If you can)

    She left pursued by white balloons

    Brought along to the fire scene

    By someone I don’t know

    Who was doing their very best.

    After abnormal handshakes

    And crushing embraces

    We went down to the pub in town.

    and I started drinking

    For decades.