Monday, I led my last poetry
reading session at an assisted living facility. I have been leading the club
for 16 months: I have loved it and have loved the elders, but I’m ready for a
break. Fortunately, one of the people who works at the facility will now take
it on.
Each week I’ve collected
poems that I think they might like around a theme of interest to them. This
week’s collection I titled, “Giving Thanks” and I included poems that either
they introduced me to or I will think about differently because of them. (There
are of course more of those poems than we could read in an hour, so I’ve snuck many
in the last two weeks, too.)
We read James Wright’s “The
Blessing,” a gentle poem about a man’s encounter with horses that will always
remind me of Sheila’s gentle nature and love of horses. Next we read the
humorist Dorothy Parker’s poem “One Perfect Rose,” a poem that May Lynn
introduced me to and fits her literary sense of humor. That poem also reminds
me two longer humorous poems from residents: Robert Service’s “The Cremation of
Sam McGee,” that will always remind me of Geoff, one of the first members of
poetry club, a man with a subtle sense of humor; and Ernest Thayer’s “Casey at
the Bat,” that reminds me of Frank, a man with a full-bodied laugh who lived
eight years in a Japanese internment camp and was one of the few of his
regiment to return from World War II.
Then there was a poem from
Zelda, “Leisure” by William Henry Davies: “What is this life if, full of care,
/ We have not time to stop and stare.” I’ll always hear it in her South African
accent. Though I’ve known for years Robert Frost’s “Stopping by Woods on a
Snowy Evening,” I’ve never heard it read so beautifully as by Ada, who at 97 often
angers other residents because she doesn’t hear well and doesn’t have much of a
social filter. The first time Ada read the poem, the other residents who had often
scowled at her burst into applause. To close the session we read Yeats’s “The
Lake Isle of Innisfree,” after which I’ll never forget Kaylin exclaiming, “Now that’s a poem!” Finally, I read Charles
Reznikoff’s poem of thanks, “Te Deum” and finished with a reading of William
Wordsworth’s “I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud,” a favorite poem of all of theirs
which they (and you) may call simply, “Daffodils.” I printed that poem so that
they could take it back to their rooms with them. I carry it in my heart with
me. I remember a discussion about those beautiful images we carry with us when
we are melancholy: light on the water, the swishing sound of a river, and the
peeling paint on an old barn. I most remember Frank saying that when he thought
of something beautiful and joyful he thought of his lovely wife of 63 years,
whom we had all known until her recent death.
Though we have usually ended
with a song, and I’ll never forget Pearl dancing to “You Ain’t Nothin’ but a
Hounddog,” this week we ended with Judith’s expression of gratitude to me and
chocolate cupcakes. Judith has meant so much to me since I met her: she doesn’t
deal with the cognitive issues that most residents do but experiences pain from
arthritis and ongoing heart problems. I love her feisty spirit: her insistence
on those who work there respecting all of the residents for their amazing
stories and continuing humanity. Judith is a thanksgiver. This time, she said,
“You have changed my life.” About six months ago, she told me, “You have
reminded me of a part of myself that I had forgotten.” Frank yelled out, “Bless
you.” And others contributed similar blessings. Afterwards, many of the
residents came up to say a personal thank you. Earnie kissed me on the cheek: a
gentle kiss that will remain with me.
I am a thanksgiver, too, and
being thanked means a lot to me.
As I left the room and headed
for the stairs, Geoff’s daughter, a bit younger than I am, chased me down (not
hard to do as I hobbled with my cane), saying she wanted to thank me for how
much this club has meant to her 97 year-old father. She's in a family of thanksgivers. As she talked, I remembered
her mother Anneka, who was sick with cancer when I arrived last June. At that
point, Anneka slept most of the day, used an oxygen tank and a walker, kept her eyes closed, and was
mostly non-verbal. I only ever heard her speak two words. One day after I’d
spent some time in their apartment talking with Geoff about poetry, she opened
her eyes wide, and said, “Thank you.”
Though I am tired and ready
for a rest, my heart is full of gratitude.