The final months of Patrick’s life
my mother tried to make me eat. Enticed
with plates of homemade pasta, green pesto,
whole wheat rolls yeasty and
warm in the centre,
peanut butter on salted crackers,
coconut curry, and once,
a whole chocolate cheesecake
with raspberry drizzle.
I tried to eat. A few bites
in and everything tasted
like cancer, round and sandy,
the rough insides
of tumours beneath
a fatty shell.
She told me
you have to eat
in times like these.
The last year of marriage, my mother
did not eat. The house
wilted. I made myself
vomit to keep
from going to school, should I
come home and find
my father gone.
My grandmother said,
you have to eat in times like these. And I watched
all the round layers of her love
for me fall at her once-sturdy ankles.
He was gone, in time
and then, pound
by pound, so
was she.
Cara-Lyn Morgan lives and works in Mississauga, Ontario. Her first book-length collection of poems, What Became My Grieving Ceremony, was released by Thistledown Press in 2014. It explores planes of grief ranging from the specific loss of an individual to the wider, cultural grieving associated with the loss of family stories and cultural identity.