What Matters Poem by Francie Lynch

What Matters



If we're together
When we're older,
If one's not left for another,
If one's not dead,
Or out of sorts
Or imprisoned on an institutional bed;
Let me tell what lies ahead.

We'll go to sleep wearing socks,
And rise by our internal clocks;
While on walks we'll hold hands,
And listen while the other talks.
We'll sit content by the St. Clair River
In Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter.

We'll have our tea and buttered toast,
On weekends enjoy your Sunday Roast.
Around the table our children sit,
With grandkids we're blessed to be with.
Then, in the evening, when all are gone,
And we're in our home, all alone,
I'll confess my love again;
You're all I've wanted all along

Monday, January 28, 2019
Topic(s) of this poem: aging,children,grandchild,life and death,love and life,old age
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Francie Lynch

Francie Lynch

Monaghan, Ireland
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