Before They Were Suicides
Before they were suicides, they were our children.
All soiled hands and scrapped knees. Laughing; Playing
with abandon. As if time had no consequence;
As if forever was a given.
We could not see beyond the limit of their lifetime
then. Could not imagine the urn holding their
ashes, or the single rose on the coffin, lowered
slowly into the hard, cold ground.
Before their final struggle they were our babies.
Dimpled hands grasping wildly; New eyes shinning
smiles; Gleeful squeals under peppered kisses,
and raspberry blows on soft bellies.
I remember the way you gripped me; Legs
straddling my hip; Tiny arms circling my
neck; Holding on as if there were no options;
Clinging tight, as if your life depended on it.
Before all faith was shattered they were believers; In Santa,
magic, and the tooth fairy. In the power of the dark
and monsters in the closet; That we could fix all
things; That we would never let them fall.
We believed kisses were the soothing balm for
bruises then, that simple band aides covered
stinging wounds, and our squeezing hugs to
quiet bitter tears would always heal.
Before the mark of teens they were our toddlers.
Explorers on unsure, testing feet: Fearlessly consuming
life; Brave discoverers of worlds inside the
tiny universe we made for them.
And the first time you peddled the big wheel away
with dawning independence; Small and determined.
I always believed I could call you back again;
And that you would come.
Before they were statistics they were our beloved;
Restless, pensive, joyous and despairing; Embattled
keepers of conviction; Carriers of all our hopes;
Our dream into the future.
And in this anguished aftermath, this
bleeding, empty present; The vivid color of your
lives will linger; And we will remember, before
you were a suicide, you were our child.
Ann Woodly
Forever Justin’s Mom
September, 2010