Helium Year: on the Death of an Adult Son
Helium Year: on the Death of an Adult Son
By Lucinda Pinchot
I don’t want to lose this year.
I don’t want to keep it either.
I want it to float above me
follow me, shine on me, stay
tethered to me and the cosmos
by space age filaments,
suspended.

It’s not that I fear the gravity of it,
there is love in the heft.
Not a ball and chain
but a substantiveness that defines my shape.
My new form,
forged from days of agony
attached with adoration
becoming weeks, months, welded together
like mail armor,
impenetrable.

I’m grateful to live in four seasons.
My memories are measured by the sun.
Did I wake in darkness or light?
Was I wearing a coat or were bare arms comfortable?
Bare arms will never be comfortable.
I will take solace in the tug,
the weight and buoyancy,
of the year
I keep over me.

Lucinda Pinchot has been writing poetry for fifty years, and recently retired from the Yale School of Medicine where she worked as a nurse for twenty years. Currently living in Ohio, she teaches children how to garden and continues to write poetry and prose.

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