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Carole Mathys

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           >> View all 176
 

Parade of Shadows
by Carole Mathys

Sunday, January 15, 2006
Not rated by the Author.
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~ Parade of Shadows ~


 


 


They line them up like old boots


side by side up and down the hall


like a surplus of useless objects


they roll them out each day on call


~~


Lined up like worn out empty containers


they stare out into space


For hours on end they slump in chairs


a mask of sadness and defeat on each face


~~


The days become one long nightmare


as they struggle to recall


a life where they lived and were loved


before age and illness robbed them all


~~


An endless brigade of wheel chairs


is on the move each day


forced to join that endless line


of the forgotten and throwaways


~~


Families just left them there


for others to tend with care


Instead they’re rolled out each day


to keep them out of the staff’s hair


~~


These sad and vacant faces


were once filled with hopes and dreams


vibrant,  vital individuals


they laughed, loved and schemed


~~


Aging plays cruel and tragic tricks


robbing memories and stealing ones essence too


Devouring all becoming empty shells


 leaving nothing that once was you


~~


So when you see this parade of shadows


wheels neatly lined up side by side


Please take time to stop, to touch, to smile and talk


someday it could be you  --  so don’t hide


 


© 2006


Carole Mathys


 


 


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Reviewed by Only A Poet 1/21/2006
such a sad situation you have portrayed with much feeling.
Reviewed by Regis Auffray 1/20/2006
So true and good advice and counsel, Carole. I can relate to this as I visited my father in a nursing home for a period of five years. Thank you for this. Love and peace,

Regis
Reviewed by jude forese 1/19/2006
in highly developed socities, the "old ones" are respected for their wisdom and experience ... they help to teach the young ones the knowledge and beauty life has to offer ... in our society, we tend to discard them which is truly a tragedy ...



your poem is a compassionate and important statement!
Reviewed by J M 1/19/2006
Nursing homes are so sad they sit as though they have been passed by and many can't remember where they are going. I was involved in a ministry of going to just love them talk with them, share thoughts nothing more.
They love the visits breaks ones heart when family members leave them and sometimes never return. Won derful powerful poetry thanks for sharing this one.
Reviewed by C. McGovern-Bowen 1/19/2006
What an incredible, powerfully moving capture this write is, Carole!
Exceptionally well done. I know the subject only too well...
Peace and blessings to you sublime Poetess!
Carolyn
Reviewed by Phyllis Jean Green 1/18/2006
The situation is horrible -- a great blot on our nation that we all need to fight to remove --, but your poem is beyond wonderful.
As one who worked with elderly patients in and out of nursing facilities {including a long stint as a consultant to an "extended
care" 'home'}, I have tried for years to put into words what you have said here. What a r e m a r k a b l e j o b you have done! This is both highly creative and devastingly true. Heartrendering!! Bless you for your efforts on behalf of every person who is being lumped into
the "elderly and incapacitated &-or blah-yata" category...essentially forgotten? On the cusp of my 73rd birthday, the matter is hardly academic to me. Bless you, Carole. Bless you. 'Pea' <3
Reviewed by William Bonilla 1/16/2006
I know where you're coming from Carole
I've seen this first hand
When I visit my mothet-in-law
At a nursing home, she was recovering from a stroke
And it broke my heart too
I wrote a piece on this subject myself
But can't remember the title
When it comes to me I will let you know
Thanks for sharing

Love & Peace
William
Reviewed by Karen Lynn Vidra, The Texas Tornado 1/16/2006
Excellent write, dear Carole; always love to read you! :) Well done!

(((HUGS))) and much love, your friend in Tx., Karen Lynn. :D
Reviewed by alejapoet@aol.com Bennett 1/15/2006
Very well written and put together. For i have learned to be content with whatever God blesses me with.
Reviewed by Rosemarie Skaine 1/15/2006
Displays courage to write about these issues that society grapples with on the one hand; and on the other, wishes, they would just go away. Excellent write. R
Reviewed by Aberjhani 1/15/2006
Thank you Carole for lending your more than capable voice on behalf of those who often can't do so anymore. I just came from visiting my Mom at a nursing home, so this poem made me feel very good about taking the time to do so. You may also be interested to know that a news magazine plans to run a story by me called THE HERO IN THE WHEELCHAIR, which deals with the same issues you state so powerfully in these lines. I met the primary subject of the story while visiting my Mom during the holidays last year.
Aberjhani
Reviewed by Tinka Boukes 1/15/2006
Great offering Carole!!

Love Tinka
Reviewed by Jerry Bolton (Reader) 1/15/2006
Or, as David Allen Coe said, "say hello in there." Very good. Very touching. Very true.
Reviewed by E T Waldron 1/15/2006
You did an exceptional poem with this one Carole! How well I remember caring for the "lined up wheelers" some used to call them. It breaks your heart to think of how many truly are throw aways. Families who say they have no time to visit, when we know they just can't stand feeling uncomfortable. They don't want to be reminded of what they might become. They have all kinds of excuses, none of which are the truth. They just don't want to be bothered!It is one of the saddest indictments of this society which we shall pay for in the future.....Bless you for caring and sharing!

Eileen
Reviewed by George Carroll 1/15/2006
You are so right. Great portrayal of how some of our elderly are treated in, as you say, our throw away society.
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