You always see better with your heart,
especially when your vision is going
or has been impaired all your life.
“Nice to see you” is an expression,
not a reality, though you might well
be happy to be in someone’s orbit.
I wonder now if she, her vision mostly
gone, could see better with her heart near
the end, fighting departure as she was.
I wanted her to soften as her body
died by inches, hoped that she’d get
mooshy around the edges.
If anything, she toughened as her
skin stretched tight on bone. What
do we, the living, know about dying?
Especially if those on their way
can’t tell us. Maybe her heart was
one big puddle of love by the time
she took her last breaths. Maybe
that’s what I feel now, when she
flits into my peripheral vision—
flickers of kind, pinpoints of gentle.
Or maybe it’s because I want it
to be so, that I wish to hold her softly,
the way I wanted her to hold me,
the way she surely must have
once upon a time, when she and I
were both new.















