My Only Defense
He held my daughter’s hands
as she took her first steps.
I smiled,
remembering
how he smelled of baby powder,
his toothless grin,
the first time I held him.
Twenty odd years passed
overnight.
Where’s the little boy I used to tickle?
The kid on his skateboard?
The Marine I was so proud of?
Gone in a split second.
I keep asking myself
Why?
Why him?
Why now?
Even though knowing the answer wouldn’t change a thing.
Believing a greater good will come
is my only defense.
I mourn the loss
of the man he was
and the man
he had not yet become.
A husband.
A father.
Though I saw a glimpse of that man once...
the day he held my daughter’s hands.
He held my daughter’s hands
as she took her first steps.
I smiled,
remembering
how he smelled of baby powder,
his toothless grin,
the first time I held him.
Twenty odd years passed
overnight.
Where’s the little boy I used to tickle?
The kid on his skateboard?
The Marine I was so proud of?
Gone in a split second.
I keep asking myself
Why?
Why him?
Why now?
Even though knowing the answer wouldn’t change a thing.
Believing a greater good will come
is my only defense.
I mourn the loss
of the man he was
and the man
he had not yet become.
A husband.
A father.
Though I saw a glimpse of that man once...
the day he held my daughter’s hands.
Labels: family, poetry, writing about death










