Beautiful Bittersweet Life Poems

Exploring the world of life and grief through poetry.

Tag: Grief

  • Living With Your Memories

    Living With Your Memories

    In my mind, I travel to a place where
    My passport is no longer valid,
    And will not provide me with admittance.
    I look through the window that contains
    Only memories of the place that
    Once was my safe harbor called home.
    Of the arms and hearts of my parents who loved me,
    But are no longer alive.

    I see the home decorated for birthday parties,
    My dad making sure his girls had pretty party dresses
    Where even our dog was dressed up for the festivities.
    The yard full of neighborhood kids and cousins,
    A swing set where ghost stories were told,
    A rabbit hutch that was transformed into a clubhouse,
    and summer carnivals with games and the best homemade fudge.

    I see the joy of trips to Piseco Lake,
    And the cabin that would be home for a week.
    Canoe rides to the island in the middle of the lake,
    And nights at the dump nearby,
    With the hopes of spotting bears
    From the shelter of our station wagon.

    The annual trip to Cayuga Lake with my mom and siblings,
    and my maternal aunt with her two youngest children.
    We stayed in cabin 8, the biggest cabin with two bedrooms,
    Though the bathrooms and showers were down the road.

    The sadness of my father leaving Sunday night to return to work in Syracuse
    Would soon be filled with days when other relatives would visit,
    And we would be free range children,
    swimming in the lake and fishing from the pier,
    catching sunfish and throwing them back into the lake
    for someone else’s hook to snare them.
    Buying candy at the little shop down the road,
    And exploring places that we weren’t supposed to go.

    The longing for my parents and the grounding that they provided
    Is something that I’m still learning to grasp.
    When I return to the city of my birth,
    With a hole in my heart that cannot be fixed.
    The house that held these memories
    Means nothing without the souls
    Who once dwelled there.

  • Book Bed Companion

    Book Bed Companion

    Where your body once filled our bed,
    Leaving your imprint, your unique shape,
    Is now filled with piles of books to be read.
    Words are my new companion, filling up the
    Emptiness that you have left behind.
    You loved all kinds of writing,
    Reading them and sharing your thoughts
    In poems, songs and plays,
    Adding your unique beauty to the world.
    These books provide me escape,
    Often to England, where we once traveled.
    I read until my eyes are heavy with sleep.
    The voice from the audiobook lulls me
    As I drift off to the land of dreams.
    Your warmth and breathing no longer there
    To soothe me to sleep.

  • Dreaming of Mom

    Dreaming of Mom

    In the night you visit my dreams
    Sitting next to your gravestone,
    Alert and at peace.
    You gather me into your arms,
    Just like when I was a child,
    Holding me gently, comforting me,
    Telling me I’ll be okay.
    The tears slip down my cheeks
    As I rest my head against your bosom,
    Feeling safe and shattered at the same time.
    The ether of the dream evaporates,
    Leaving me alone in my bed,
    My face wet, wanting to hold onto you
    And longing for the respite of sleep
    To ease my grief again.

  • Broken Lens

    Broken Lens

    Nature’s beauty spreads before me,
    Begging to be photographed
    But the lens is broken when
    I take off its cover.
    Sometimes, it’s spider cracks.
    Other times, chunks of glass are missing.
    Each time, it takes me unawares.
    How can I forget that my lens hasn’t been repaired?
    But the camera sits on the shelf, in pristine shape.

    It’s my brain misfiring, straining my eyes.
    I still see the beauty.
    The ability to capture that moment is still there.
    With folly, I put myself out there like I’m the old me
    Snapping away as if I can trick my brain.
    But my eyes, my eyes, they refuse to cooperate
    “Rest,” they say. It’s too much.
    It will cost you. Are you willing to pay the price?

    And so, I must listen to the wise voice,
    The one who cares for me,
    Being okay with the unknown future,
    Finding new ways to express myself.


    This poem was inspired by a dream that I kept having. I would be somewhere in nature, see the perfect shot, only to have an unusable camera. It was only after I realized it was my brain trying to deal with visual vertigo and I wrote this poem that the dreams stopped.

  • Under Construction

    Under Construction

    The blockades are set up
    And the caution tape skitters in the breeze
    Warning, merge left, merge right
    Detour this way,
    This road is under construction
    Until further notice.

    It’s uncomfortable having the road torn up,
    Reshaped, uncertain of what it will look like.
    Every day the street looks messier.
    Will it be days, months, years
    until it is back to normal and
    traffic adjustments and restraints are done?

    How glorious it is when
    The barricades are removed.
    The wheels move smoothly over
    The fresh black tar roads, relief replacing
    Frustration and despair.

    I will find joy in driving on this
    Quiet road for as long as it lasts,
    Knowing that potholes will return,
    And it will be upended again.


    This poem was inspired by the continual road construction that is going on. I always feel a sense of frustration with the delays. Then I turn it inwards, reflecting on how my life is constantly under construction. Those times are often overwhelming, and I wish I could skip them. But once I’ve walked through those changes, I come out feeling and functioning better than when I started. This perspective also helps me when I must undergo another excavation, knowing that I will continue to grow.