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Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/view_item/item_id/2081441-Milestone
by fyn
Rated: E · Poetry · Family · #2081441
Why is it that certain milestones cannot be ignored?
Prompt for: April 15, 2016 (Ren)
Subject or Theme: Birthdays! (Today is mine) Write about any memorable birthday; it can be for you or someone else.
Word(s) to Include: forbidden, (include the age you were in your poem) (or any derivatives of these words)
Forbidden Word(s): balloons, birthday, cake, celebration, party (or any derivatives, compound or hyphenations of these words)
Additional Parameters: 24 lines minimum
Remember, do not use forbidden words ANYWHERE, including title or the brief description.


Milestone


It was forbidden!
(At least in my mind, it was.)
No fuss, no black streamers.
I wanted to let the dreaded fiftieth go by
unremarked, unnoticed.
Whispered conversations
cut short
alerted me to possibilities
that the 'me-glare' didn't dispel.

In the weeks before that occasion,
I discovered I needed new glasses,
(Thank goodness for invisible bifocal lines)
that my left shoulder ached,
that my right knee decided it didn't like
the basement stairs, that the oldest granddaughter
was pregnant and that afternoon naps
were sublimely glorious.

I looked in the bathroom mirror
and saw my mother looking back at me.
How could this be?
In my mind, I felt no different.
When did I get old?
It's just a number, isn't it?
No, the days of indestructability have passed,
immortality went back
to being a fairy tale.

My husband snored his way through
the dark hours, rising with suppressed energy,
bringing me coffee in a new mug
with an owl sitting on a gnarled branch.
He fixed me breakfast, but never said a word,
offered up no felicitations.
My daughter called complaining
about her boss,
the cats who'd torn apart her living room,
her computer that had died midst a major presentation
and wanted to know if she could borrow my favorite hoodie.

We scrounged for dinner,
watched the ball game (my team lost!)
and spent mindless hours on our computers,
side by side,
each playing our games; a usual evening.
Four hundred and seventeen Facebook friends
(of whom I truly know perhaps twenty)
wished me well.

I got my wish: no fuss, no bother.
No black confections, no goofy presents,
no being the center of attention.
I lay in bed that night
thinking about
half-century marks
as I rubbed my shoulder,
thinking about
earned badges of honor
showing in grey hair, wrinkles and laugh lines,
thinking about
the fact that perhaps I'd made a mistake.

I was feeling
strangely disappointed
in getting what I'd asked for.
Funny, how we are never too old
to learn something new.






© Copyright 2016 fyn (fyndorian at Writing.Com). All rights reserved.
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Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/view_item/item_id/2081441-Milestone