Since the #campfire broke out, I’ve felt a bizarre sense of deja vu about grief. Mourning Jack and watching the anguish of my neighbors just west of here brought something back.  Then I remembered writing this poem and performing it with my friend Maggie McKaig at a Coyote Women Howling event at the North Columbia Schoolhouse around the turn of the century.  I’ve felt this before. It was after my nephew was killed, when Timothy McVey murdered so many in Oklahoma City.  Today’s circumstances differ, but the twist and the pull are just the same. I feel the weight of my neighbors’ ashes as they fall here, and now my tears are no longer specific, no longer personal.

 

In Death’s Circle

 

a poem for two voices

 

you know my love goes with you as your love stays with me

it’s just the way life changes like the shoreline of the sea

let’s not talk of love or change or things we can’t untie

your eyes fill with sorrow–hey that’s no way to say good-bye–L. Cohen

 

April 19, 1995

one more survivor is all we ask

no one I know is sleeping near midnight

fenced in by walls we pace through the pauses

in news bulletins, try to fathom a reason

July  21, 1994

Soon there is room in ICU

for me to see him again

I stare at his comatose face

Begin massaging his healthy legs

study the amber hairs on his calves

He just clipped his toenails  his mom

tells me in a swollen voice

this is samsara–the realm of human suffering

I look into her black blue face

barely recognize her

she collapses on his chest again

gives in to the sobbing

there may still be survivors

trapped in the building

“Gotta hope!  Gotta hope!” I chant

massage his calves

study the meter that

monitors brain pressure

stare at the shunt wedged in

to his dark blond straight cut hair

He is ten years old.

on Friday they near the daycare center

one mother’s waited 48 hours for news

workers tear through risk and rebar

Out in the waiting room we bargain with God.

2 p.m. Friday the 21st there are 58 counted dead

5 pm. Friday the 21st there are 65 counted dead

(Two weeks ago, right after his birthday

We hugged and rocked at the foot of my stairs

“We’re so stupid,” we joked, “we should see each other

every day when we love each other so much.”)

Nearer and nearer to the babies

Then the phone call

the rush to Sacramento

to see the shunt

to see the meters

to see the flagging hope

By Monday over a hundred counted dead

I am the cheerleader

“Gotta hope!  Gotta hope!”

One more survivor

Just one more is all we ask.

meet with doctors in the conference room

A woman weeps over her grandson

incubating in the ICU burn unit

swap folk tales of

brain injury recoveries

in the waiting room

One woman on the news says:

“There were so many people, hurt so badly”

she says all the people from her unit are

wondering about that one baby

somehow eating

somehow breathing

somehow hoping

keep massaging

They have reached the daycare center

“Fight Barry!  Fight!” I say to him

“It’s no longer a matter of fighting,” the nurse says

Just one more is all we ask

we sign the papers for organ donation

Finally the heavy equipment can come in

Last Rites: the family gathered ‘round

My brother, his father, stands arms crossed

My mother’s face–acute with grief

she has already buried a son

with this child’s name

My father’s face resigned to loss

This is samsara–the realm of human suffering

“Gotta hope. Gotta hope.” I say

after everyone has left

The final death count: one hundred sixty-seven

I watch the meters wind down

feel my stomach twist

out of me

pulling my throat

pulling my face

into the gravity

of death’s circle


 

 

Friends have created a Go Fund Me to help CC with Jack’s medical expenses. Please share widely and give if you can.

https://www.gofundme.com/help-for-cc-and-jack?fbclid=IwAR0FemImlcgJG0UlgeSmuowKwsD9y8RqECFpzCcr-tzQ0HimmASXtIwyTSU

Just as importantly, please help the victims of the #campfire in any way you can.