Home > MB Herald August 2010 > Features > Winner - poetry: on reflection
Winner - poetry: on reflection
0 Comment(s)

on reflection

cold and wintry day
same work
same place

she –
driving to work
immersed with thoughts of the day to come

he –
driving from work
immersed in thought from the day just done

announcements vague radio crackles
urge caution; snow, ice, rain

Inexplicably
she – not in control
split-second suddenness
the oncoming vehicle, the impact
consciousness obliterated – only silent darkness

Inexplicably
he –
split-second suddenness
the oncoming vehicle, out of control
crushing impact
consciousness obliterated – silent darkness

she – unconscious, “jaws of life,”
paradoxical
extricating still cargo
oh so carefully
hurry
frantic lights flashing, wailing, streaking, swirling, rushing to aid

he – dimly aware, jaws of life
wrenching doors apart
extricating immobile cargo
oh so carefully
hurry
frantic lights, rushing, wailing, strangers, repeated questions

orders barked
surgical scissors, tubes, needles, invasive equipment
cacophony of activity

minutes morph to
hours...

the doctor’s pronounce
she –
“...so sorry”
such cold finality
time and signature noted
for the record

the doctor’s pronounce
he –
“you...very lucky”
notes
entered in the record

she –
everything has halted
community gathers round
distraught confused numb
a surreal blur
kind but unheard
words are spoken

he –
in pain, in shock
harsh welcome reminders
of life continuing
reunion
relief, joy, gentle admonishment

Luck?

she –
it has run out

he –
not yet

or perhaps...
something else

–Eckhard Goerz
 

Comments (0)  

Post a comment  

Comments on this story are semi-moderated. That means that comments appear immediately but may be removed if they violate our submission guidelines.
You must be logged in to leave a comment.  Log in | Sign up
 
 

Comment

Post
PrintShareText Size:Small TextMedium TextLarge Text
“When traumatic events are very similar but have dramatically opposite outcomes – death vs. survival and recovery – we can find ourselves searching for elusive answers.” Eckhard Goerz wrote this poem several years after two similar highway car accidents happened to him and a co-worker within weeks of each other. He is a recently retired health administrator, policy developer, and social worker. He was CEO of Eden Health Care Services from 2001–2008. A husband, father, and grandfather, Eckhard and his wife Joyce are affiliated with Fort Garry MB Church, Winnipeg.