Today
is the 40th day since my mother died. In the Eastern Orthodox
Church, the 40th day is the official end of the mourning period,
referencing the Ascension occurring 40 days after Easter. For the 40 days
following death, it is believed the person has not officially left this world
completely, and may still visit their homes, their graves and their loved ones.
After this day, the deceased has now officially moved on. Clothes can be given
away to the poor and the house cleaned out.
The 40th
Day
No
more visits
to
the urn,
to
the frozen grave, still undug,
to
the closet
where
the clothes still hang,
to
the shoes and belt
still
laid out
for
the next day
that
never came,
to
the bed on which
she
laid down
that
morning
and
from which
she
never rose again.
Now
is the time
to
rise up,
to
go onward
deeper
into
the
mysterious color
that
deepens and shimmers
and
goes on and on.
It
is time to shut the door,
to
turn out the light,
to
turn away
and
move on
from
what was once
familiar
and
is now awkward
and
strange.
It
is time
to
go
and
leave behind
the
urn
the
closet
the
bed
the
shoes and belt
the
one who
stands
there
empty-handed
and
bewildered
and
staring
blankly
into
the gathering dusk
and
all
it
holds.
—Jamie Parsley
1 comment:
Lovely Jamie. It is a long hard journey.
Post a Comment