To Whatever Comes Next
Whatever Comes Next
rustling gold-green leaves
in tall old oaks. The corner of Poplar
and Hawthorne hums with constant
cars, motorcycles, trucks, vans.
Shadows mix with patches of sunlight
on the grass, branches wave slow
cicadas rhythms pulsing a backbeat
to the melody of wheels rolling
engines pulsing on pavement.
Summer ends slow and supple
the shifting of air and earth
as natural as breath in lungs.
Drumbeats of autumn felt
in the breeze, in what is golden
and shadowed, in the way my heart pulls
at the knowledge that we will soon
leave this place. This place
of shelter, of sorrow, of sunshine
of rest, of rehabilitation, of rain.
I lean into September’s sunlight
and know it will stay with me, a shadow
of the summer that broke my heart
and saved my child’s life
tears and laughter, screams and smiles
already touchstones of memory, pink and purple
lollipops, her hanging from rings
on the playground, surrounded by kindness
the music of the only thing
we all have left, the thing
that thrums through each person
who ever calls this place home
for a season, until changes come
sending us home, heart holding hope
as leaves burn green-gold-rust, heart salvaging
rainbows from rain, stepping out of shadows
into brightness, into the following chapter, into
whatever comes next, sunlight on our backs
the shadow of Poplar and Hawthorne
and its old oak trees behind us.
Copyright @Stacie Eirich January 2, 2024
*Photos above and below are mine, taken at St. Jude’s Target House, August 30 2023.
To reach the end of my child’s treatment and receive the news that every parent of a pediatric cancer patient wants — that your child no longer has any signs of cancer — is a moment of mixed emotions. Yes, there is great relief and joy so expansive that it almost feels overwhelming, like taking in breath when you can’t hold anymore air.
But in that same breath there is also a wrenching sorrow, and an anxiety that can also seem overwhelming. Anxiety from the changes of leaving a place you’ve grown comfortable with, a place with friends who understand the fight, friends who are still fighting and that you leave behind. Stress from the new realities you face when you get home — of navigating a return to school, work, domestic duties, finding continued therapies in new places, of reentering life when the needs and emotions of your child are different — when you are different.
Of overwhelming fear from ‘Whatever Comes Next.’
In a blink, three months have passed, and we are entering whatever comes next in 2024. So I felt it was apt to share this poem as we move forward into a new year. It was the last poem I wrote before leaving St. Jude’s Target House (where we lived this summer); its entrance is at the corner of Poplar and Hawthorne. I wrote several poems out in its green spaces, and often sat watching and listening to the trees and traffic there. It was a space of peace and calm, a place where I could walk or write out my grief — or sit and breathe through my sorrow.
In December, my family returned to St. Jude and visited Target House briefly after follow-up scans. It was decorated with festive trees and colorful Christmas lights. The staff gives off warmth, friendliness and a kindness that could perhaps only be found in a house filled with young cancer patients and caregivers. The pain is palpable, but so is the hope.
At home, the pain is still palpable. But the hope is perhaps, greater. Instead of facing only the next hour or day, we are looking forward to the next months. We are making plans and living life — and know there are big changes coming. Changes that will see our family moving again, though this time, not for cancer treatments.
We can’t leave the last year of our lives behind us, just as the candy-striped playground and old oak trees at Target House, the sights and smells and sounds of Memphis will remain in my memory.
But here’s to that tremulous, wondrous ‘Whatever’ is coming next — we are ready.
Thank you for being here, and for reading. I’m grateful for family, friends and readers like you. Your love and support means everything.
If you’d like to listen to this poem and the thoughts that followed it — you can find the audio on my podcast, Poetry for Peace, Season 4: A New Dawn — listen on Spotify, Apple, Amazon, Google & more.
Listen to ‘Whatever Comes Next,’ Episode 1 of Season 4, Poetry for Peace, on Spotify Here
Happy New Year 2024,
Stacie
*Post Script* My child is a patient at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. If you’d like to follow our journey to a cure, visit: https://www.caringbridge.org/visit/hopeforsadie
Comments
Post a Comment