Things I didn't know
March 08, 2019
That morphine is pale blue
sickly-sweet baby blue
like every cutesy sleeper
I didn't want for my infant son.
That I would feel
like a mother bird
tenderly tucking the drops
under her waiting tongue.
That the gasp and hiss
of the oxygen pump
would be both comforting
and terrible.
That when I closed my eyes
by her bedside, trying
to envision her
enrobed in light
the vision would morph
to a white Chanel suit
and I would see her
wearing her life's mitzvot
woven into a white pillbox hat
and a smart white suit
and white heels with open toes
and a cream-colored pedicure
vivacious and flirty
as a 1940s movie star
taking God's hand,
ready for the honeymoon to begin.
[W]earing her life's mitzvot. There's a teaching in the Zohar, that germinal work of Jewish mysticism, that says that in the world to come each soul will wear a garment of light, woven out of the mitzvot one fulfilled while living in this world.
Written after my mother entered hospice care. May her memory be a blessing.