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Two Poems
Remembrance
Far into fever, at war within,
it was almost Christmas.
The tree tangled with warm lights.
His body cold
years attached to chords
sore and deformed.
Slow to walk
each foot using
each last strength
to scale the living room steps.
Breathing is erratic,
but he never asks for help.
Mom says it's mind over matter.
Every visit with the doctor is a new time of death,
yet every time he overcomes their impossible test.
Swallowed by my ignorance,
I thought that you were blessed
overlooked every morning
in complete distress.
Skillfully hoisting disjointed instruments
of your body off your bedrest
every muscle howling out for help.
The brief hallway between our rooms,
a grueling course, conquered
with repeatedly fading footsteps.
An orchestra of diversions composed
to silence the truth.
My attention consumed,
I zoned out your withering symphony of a tune.
Your slippers on the hardwood floor
like a metronome that kept my tempo steady:
I love you,
It's too soon, I'm not ready
But it was Christmas
and as you hugged me
skin to bone
I felt you surrender
together,
but I felt alone
as I finally realized
you're not made
of unbreakable stone.
Mind no longer wielding your matter.
Thoughts buried deep
Medication the healer or the disaster?
Loosely floating your mind
soothing songbirds above your sleep.
No more tune, but your steady breathing,
a threaded endurance,
and then, peace.
Now your memory lies deep in mine.
Whispers that gently sail through the house walls.
Your sound,
a soothing melody ever lingering
to remind me of your spirit signaling,
to keep the beat steady
in the hallway of our room’s uneven ground.
Peering down the corridor I still see
your open door and comedic frowns.
So as your spirit seeps through these words,
I feel your presence,
although your pieces won't all reveal again
the energy you carry on still emits,
remembrance.
Note to Grave
Don't tell me to deny reality,
because I can't bear the lie
anymore.
Our tennis battles turned into internal battles.
Your strength sawed away and dismantled.
I stood by and listened
as your vocals slowly dropped to the floor,
My late-night thoughts like a sword
slicing through my core.
Now, I live by faded “good mornings”
of your voice
these words taken for granted
until they were suppressed.
These unlicensed echoes of soul now still
pierce through me
like a whale's cry
traversing the depths of the ocean’s chest.
Unbind me from reality,
because I can’t bear these echoed vocals
from long ago.
When will your voice fade into a static radio?
When do I switch the channel
finding a new mode to hold this soul
that makes me, me?
Tell me, Dad
When will you answer
and set me free?
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Frederick Zettersten-Mansour is a Junior at The Branson School located in Ross, California. He found his love for writing poetry during his Sophomore year of high school. He likes to write introspective poems about himself and his relationship with his father.