Teach me to number my days
by Elouise
I inhabit moments
One after the other,
Not without hope
I witness resurrection partially
In passing seasons of my life
And repeated seasons of nature
Seasons of life
are once and over
living on in aging memory
and dusty memorabilia
Though my spirit revives
From time to time,
The clock ticks on
Without reverting to zero
I hope for what I cannot see
And choose to let go of certainty,
Falling instead into something
I’ve never seen or known
There’s sadness and agony
In daily and final death;
I’m invited to accept this
Not deny or sublimate it
As though it didn’t exist
Is hesitation to own
The agony of death
A denial of life as it is
On this side of
Whatever comes next?
In this life I’m called
To face fears, regrets, sorrows,
And the anguish of saying goodbye
Not once but many times over
Whatever comes next
It isn’t about denial or
We’ll cross that bridge
When we come to it
It’s about preparing for death
Every day of my life
Because it matters to me
and to those I leave behind
So teach me to number my days….
This is my attempt to put a few personal thoughts into words. I’m convinced this part of my life is about learning to die and learning to talk and write about it. Not the moment of death itself, but how I’m doing (or not doing) at living this last chapter of my life.
So this is where I am as of today. Thanks for reading, and for any comments you care to leave. I’m most grateful!
© Elouise Renich Fraser, 1 May 2019
Photo of Masai Mara National Park Sunset found at brettstephens.com
And I am grateful for you!
“I inhabit moments
One after the other,
Not without hope”
Amen!
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Thank you, dear Debbie. 🙏🏻
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Dear Elouise. I never spent much time counting days and I suppose I should have. I was always a Matthew 6:34 person and I might have been a bit one dimensional and missed out on some things.
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Dear John,
It’s so good see your picture! Thanks for this comment.
I think numbering our days is about living in the present–without pretending we’ll live forever. For me that means I can’t keep putting off for later things I need to do today. Some people make a bucket list of places to go and things to do before they die. I’ve never made a bucket list partly because I haven’t wanted to acknowledge death is coming. Besides, I really didn’t want to parachute out of an airplane! Now death is coming sooner, not later. And each day matters more now than it did even yesterday.
I’m guessing you’ve been way more adventuresome than I’ve been. Right now my health invites me into an adventure I don’t necessarily want to have. The adventure of watching my body move toward death. Especially in the small (and sometimes big) stuff that just keeps piling on. My body is wearing out, even though I feel more alive now than ever.
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I asked my brother for a translation of “Tech us to number etc” in Yamplatok (Torres Strait creole) and he sent me this;
LodGod, lane mipla sole mipla go sabe dat laip i prapa sotwan, solong i go meke mipla tingbaut po kip kam mo waiz.
Back translation
Lord God, teach us so that we will understand that our life is very short, so it will make us think about continuing in becoming more wise.
Print it on canvas and pin it on your wall.
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I love it! 💜
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