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A poem about being at the park with my grandchildren who live 300 miles away. |
| It is a beautiful summer morning, the kind where those white, puffy clouds drift lazily across a sparkling cerulean sky. The sight of my grandchildren playing in the park so happily serves to lift my mood quite high; but I can only try to forget that my wife and I later today must return to our home 300 miles away. I take a seat on a bench in the shade, thinking how living so far away has made us miss so much of our grandchildren’s lives. I start to feel somewhat sorry for myself. Upon the bench’s other end sits another man. My grandkids squeal with delight. My heart thrives on their glee! The man now begins to mutter to himself; tears are rolling down his cheeks. “You’re luckier than you know. Enjoy those grandchildren!” he tells me, wiping his eyes. “It’s months between times when I see them. I’m real unhappy about the situation, I fear.” “My grandchildren were killed by a drunk driver last year.” Please come visit my website at: http://www.gillelands.com/poetry/ |