“A poem is the very image of life expressed in its eternal truth.”
Percy Bysshe Shelley

About My Poems

Haiku-style poems in triptych allow me to distill the Multiple Sclerosis experience into very few words. While these often nontraditional haikus have journal-like qualities, they are not my daily journal. They merely represent what I or someone I know will have experienced on the MS journey. Poems published on Mondays will generally focus on nature.
My poems will span
the emotional spectrum.
That is what I live.

A smile may lift me
past my MS challenges.
I share that with you.

Sometimes sadness trumps
easy laughter and resolve.
I will write then too.



Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Does MS Ever Make You Think of …


where is this headed
the unfairness of it all
how pissed off you are

the career you left
how much money you have spent
the friends that you miss

who have you become
what is the meaning of life
how can you find joy

9 comments:

ncole said...

You just described my daily stream of thoughts.

Anonymous said...

Bravo!

Karen said...

Yep, all of the above. But I am trying really hard to come up with ways to achieve the last line.

Gail said...

Hi, seems like I just told you everything I think, every day. My God!! MS Sucks

love you
Gail
peace.....

Patrick said...

Another reason I appreciate your poetic thoughts is that Patti with ever progressing MS memory loss and cognitive challenges cannot really communicate concepts you've expressed in this poem. Caregiving for a person living in the now doesn't mean, at least to me, that just because MS robs communication it does not mean there are still not emotions trapped inside.

Caregivingly Yours, Patrick

Robert Parker said...

This is my struggle too, right now. I keep hearing the universe saying "Not any more!" but at the same time it's also saying "This, instead!"

Neither of them can happen without the other. Each creates the other.

And yet, I can only hear one of them. And that one... hurts.

Elizabeth McClung said...

Yes, though not MS, but similar in start, I never knew I was in the 'in crowd' until something aquired by no fault of my own excluded me - the things valued in this society left and the things found distasteful, or which society fears remained and grew.

Peace Be With You said...

Nicole, I was actually describing my own stream of thoughts.

Anonymous, thanks.

Karen, yeah, finding joy is sometimes elusive yet I know I have to keep trying to find it.

Gail, we must be each other’s echo chamber then.

Patrick, I am honored that you think I might be in any way giving voice to Patti.

Robert, this illness excels at placing us on the cusp of indecision.

Elizabeth, welcome to my blog. Thanks for your heartfelt comments.

Judy

Kayla said...

Yes.