The Grieving Stone

The Grieving Stone

A Poem by icelandicblue
"

Obsidian is a glassy and sharp volcanic rock also called Apache Tears

"
I sit in a room bereft of light
in a darkness befit for mushrooms.
There is comfort a certain
silence born of blindness,

a time to think and wallow
when church bells are silent
and the clock wrings it hands,
for grief knows no schedule.

Devoid of light my memories
flash in more vivid detail
against a midnight screen
of loss and emptiness.

The black curtain I've wrapped
around myself swaddles me
tight, cutting off my breath
making me lightheaded.

Moonlight eventually puddles through
narrow windows in two parallel lines
beckoning me to follow it outside
where the stars await my homecoming,

so I follow, squinting at their faraway sparkle,
staid pinpricks of hope that hang in the sky
as crisp air gently slaps me awake.
I discover I still find comfort in the pitch of night.

I am not yet ready for life's brightness.
Mired in these dispiriting days of November
that fill my soul with a numbing elixir
paralyzing me to the possibilities that await

beyond the obsidian of Apache Tears
that I clutch in my hand until blood runs free
as I try to dispel my disharmonious energy
into the sharp soul of the grieving stone.


© 2013 icelandicblue


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Featured Review

This poem is full of emotion, and the words you chose are beautiful. I especially love the term "Apache Tear", as it itself entails a whole story of suffering along with the emotion created by your poem. Solitude is a blessing and a curse. It inspires, and it gives us time with our thoughts, time to grieve. I understand how painful being alone with one's thoughts is when one is grieving. The pain conjured by grief is enough to draw the figurative blood of emotions and memories, and make it run free. The numbness is pain itself. Thank you, for capturing it so beautifully. An awe-inspiring poem!

Posted 10 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

This comment has been deleted by the poster.
icelandicblue

10 Years Ago

Thank you so very much The Hampstead poet. I apologize for the very late response. I hadn't read thi.. read more



Reviews

For me, this speaks of a person scared to let go of grief and be happy again -- a deep loss, either a tragic death or a loss of family, home, security, can do this to us. Keep us static, and holding on to that stone. A powerful write.

Posted 10 Years Ago


icelandicblue

10 Years Ago

Grief lies in your bones and your blood...you never know when the symptoms will surface. This was wr.. read more
This poem is full of emotion, and the words you chose are beautiful. I especially love the term "Apache Tear", as it itself entails a whole story of suffering along with the emotion created by your poem. Solitude is a blessing and a curse. It inspires, and it gives us time with our thoughts, time to grieve. I understand how painful being alone with one's thoughts is when one is grieving. The pain conjured by grief is enough to draw the figurative blood of emotions and memories, and make it run free. The numbness is pain itself. Thank you, for capturing it so beautifully. An awe-inspiring poem!

Posted 10 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

This comment has been deleted by the poster.
icelandicblue

10 Years Ago

Thank you so very much The Hampstead poet. I apologize for the very late response. I hadn't read thi.. read more
Moonlight eventually puddles through
narrow windows in two parallel lines
beckoning me to follow it outside
where the stars await my homecoming,

so I follow, squinting at their faraway sparkle,
staid pinpricks of hope that hang in the sky

oh LORD that is beautiful - I know its pitch ink you penned with but I see the beauty in the words. The eloquence.

Posted 10 Years Ago


icelandicblue

10 Years Ago

You spoil me. Thank you.
Wow, this is superbly penned. I can definitely identify with the persona's gloom. I'm actually writing a story where the obsidian stone features prominently, and is eerily close in concept to your symbolic transference of sadness to the stone so I have to laud its use here. Great stuff!

Posted 11 Years Ago


icelandicblue

11 Years Ago

Thank you so much and good luck with your story. I am quite fond of obsidian.

Wish I could write a review that could convey how wholly emotive this is, an outstanding read, you have such way with words, I am envious of your talent.

Posted 11 Years Ago


icelandicblue

11 Years Ago

I thank you but we all have our own styles and I think yours is fabulous. Thanks so much, it does me.. read more
A beautiful dark imagery here, beautifully done. I see and feel the sadness, sometimes you just want to crawl away from everything and everyone around you ... This place means a lot to you (or the person you're talking about). It's just like that I have my "Second World"

There is a personality in this piece, and a headstone, which are connected.
Touching, moving, and recognizable for me, and many.

- Elisa

Posted 11 Years Ago


icelandicblue

11 Years Ago

I still write about my father. I am still working through my grief through my writing. Thank you for.. read more

11 Years Ago

Yes, I sensed that, but I'm always careful to say, what I think, especially in situations like these.. read more
'once upon a midnight dreary/while i pondered...' tap, tap, tap

Posted 11 Years Ago


icelandicblue

11 Years Ago

Nevermore my friend, nevermore...thanks for reading.
Beautifully touching. Great job Blue

Posted 11 Years Ago


icelandicblue

11 Years Ago

Thanks BR. I appreciate you dropping in.
Having some Native American in my heritage, I am familiar with "Apache tears", and I found this write extremely emotional. You hit on something that really reached in and touched the heart, while still remaining true to the grace and flow of your own unique writing style.

I am not yet read for life's brightness
Mired in these dispiriting days of November -- these lines stood out to me...I felt them.

Well done, my friend...well done.

Posted 11 Years Ago


icelandicblue

11 Years Ago

Thanks Sarah,

I'm glad you found that the Apache tears worked in this. I appreciate you.. read more
Everybody needs that time to cut themselves off from civilization. Just to sit in the silence, with nothing but the music of their own breaths. Sometimes the world is just way too much to handle, and you just gotta sit by yourself; ignore your cell phone and social media. Too much of this silence can turn from solitude to self inflicted suffocating. Yet just opening the door, and walking head-on into reality can be too much to take for anyone. That fear keeps us in the darkness. I pray you find your way to taking baby steps back into the sunlight, and that whatever made you run scared into your panic room never returns.

Posted 11 Years Ago


icelandicblue

11 Years Ago

Thank you for such an empathetic response. It is my panic room and I never thought of it as such. I .. read more
Blue Ivory

11 Years Ago

I can understand, cuz I'd put myself in the same place recently. It's hard. At first you take a step.. read more

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805 Views
25 Reviews
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Shelved in 2 Libraries
Added on November 10, 2013
Last Updated on November 12, 2013

Author

icelandicblue
icelandicblue

Boston



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I do not accept any new friend requests unless we have read and commented on each others poetry. No exceptions. I have enough homework as it is. I expect reciprocity in our exchanges. Read my work and.. more..

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