by Joe Cottonwood
He was a beatnik.
I was a hippie.
Just a few years made the difference.
I was caretaker of his dementia.
Me with flower-power tendencies
paid bills, ordered meals, lit candles
for a cranky beatnik atheist
who spoke ten languages,
who sang in the opera.
Could be a setup for a TV sitcom,
my brother and me.
He hated religion, loved philosophy.
We would argue about spirit.
I said we all have a spirit that lives on after we die.
He wasn’t buying it and kept challenging me:
“What is spirit? What do you mean?”
I told him your spirit is like a shadow
except instead of darkness we cast light.
As the sunset neared on his life,
I could sense his spirit growing larger.
He denied it to the end and I love him for that.
I sense his presence still
and he is scowling, shaking his head.
Your spirit is a shadow
lingering
made of light
Your spirit is a shadow
growing longer
into night
Your spirit is a shadow
none can capture
all can see
Your spirit is a shadow
set free
First published in MOON Magazine
This is a gentle, empowering poem. Having lost my own parent with whom I had considerable differences, i appreciate its sentiment and love.