grief in a dustpan

It’s often when I go to sweep the floors
that it comes back
in a wave
to crash over me.

How I haven’t swept the floor
in over a week.

How, even then,
I am barely collecting anything
in the dustpan.

How all I can see in the dustpan
is dirt, mostly.

There’s no more dalmatian hair
clumping together in the dustpan
or sprinkled across the floor
within minutes of putting away
the broom in the closet.

There’s no more dalmatian hair
because you’re no longer here.

And it crashes over me,
the wave of grief.

A wave crashes

A wave crashes into the sand,
the sand unmarked and smooth
with no footprint left of human or animal,
smooth.

A wave crashes into the sand,
obliterating any remnant peace or calm
once there,
leaving rough, disturbed rocks
strewn about haphazardly
as the water rescinds back into the ocean.

A wave crashes into the sand
like a monster rears his head,
with destruction looming
even while he waits, patiently,
to attack.

the tidal wave

I have stayed away,
kept my distance,
for fear that if I came too close
and opened the door
the tidal wave would erupt,
tearing down the door and the frame
with nothing to stop the water
until it slowed down to a stream.

I thought I needed time,
more lumber and nails,
to build the frame stronger
to make it withstand the force
building.  I could feel it building
against the back of my eyes
within the cage of my chest
around the bones in my hands.

To wait just a while longer
would allow the wave to rescind
and I could open the door just a crack,
letting out the water I wanted,
under my control.
Believed this, I did.

Now, here I stand,
with the door open wide
and only a trickle of water passing
around and over my feet.
The anticipated wave is gone,
and only a small, calm pond lies
in the distance.

I was ready for the wave.
I expected and wanted it.
Still it has not come
leaving my dry skin uncomfortable
like a garden yearning to grow
with the promise of rain
that never delivers.

The wave will come again I know
to not be denied past my door.
I can only guess when or where
but I will be there
armed with paper and a pen.