Wednesday, July 08, 2020

A Drop of Holy Water


My eyes don’t often see details
Like they did
When I was a child,

Catching a blue tailed lizard,
Who ran away from me
On its tiny legs,

Leaving behind
Its shimmering blue tail
Wiggling in my hand.

My eyes don’t see funerals
Like they did
When I was a child.

When I was six
The priest prayed out loud,
While my dad, my mom, and many people

Who I didn’t know
Cried, and wiped their noses
With white handkerchiefs
They pulled from their purses and pockets.

I had mine in my front pants pocket.
I fiddled with it while the priest prayed,
Asking God to forgive my sinner grandma.
Asking God to welcome her home.

I wondered what kind of sins
My grandma could make.
I wondered if grandma would wake up.

She was asleep in the coffin
When I saw her the night before.
Mom told me Grandma wouldn’t wake up.
Grandma was dead.

The priest stepped down from the sanctuary,
Wearing his green vestments,
Praying, and sprinkling Holy water
Onto my grandma’s shiny metal coffin,

And sprinkling the congregation
Of grandma’s family and friends.
A few cold drops rained on me
And onto my glossy polished shoes.

Some spattered on my aunt Lourdes.
But one of those
Holy water sprinkles
Landed on top of her nose,

Rolled to the tip,
And hung there, as if watching
The funeral instead of falling off.

My aunt’s eyes we closed
In solemn prayer,
As I mine should have been.
  
I reached up,
Took my aunt’s hand
To tell her.

But she put her finger to her lips
And shushed me
Without opening her eyes.

I kept my gaze on the that silver drop and
Wondered how long
It would stay there.

I wondered how long
We would stay in the church,
And if the sprinkle would fall when we left.

The priest paraded the altar boys,
And the men who pushed grandma’s coffin
Down the aisle, out of the church.

My aunt took my hand and
We followed the crying ladies
With their black dresses wiggling back and forth.

I thought about the blue tailed lizard,
It’s tail having wiggled
in my hand.

My aunt pulled me forward
So I could watch the men
Slide Grandma’s shiny coffin
Into the long black hearse.

I looked up at my aunt Lourdes
And watched that silver sprinkle
Still hanging onto my aunt’s nose.


1 comment:

SharonA said...

I never went to a funeral until my mother’s at 18. We were deemed too young to go to either of my paternal grandparents’ services. All I had were descriptions in books, so I didn’t cry, and I watched my brother in case HE needed comfort. I don’t think anyone thought of us in the snow with our dress shoes freezing to our toes and the shudders racking my body, either because I wouldn’t cry, or because I didn’t think I should.