MIND DRIFT
On a frosty April morning barely a tendril
of crocus peeps through thawing earth,
a lone figure sits on his favorite park bench.
His fish eyed view reflects thinking blurred
by crackle and static he cannot control,
like remembering classmates at P.S. 153, but
forgetting who are family members, calling them
“Buster,” or “Pussycat,” based on gender.
Since losing his license driving the wrong
way on the New Jersey Turnpike, he takes
long walks and can’t find his way back, smiling
blankly with stories he repeats, wondering
what all the fuss is about, and why everyone
looks so chagrined.
He wonders where the children have gone,
swings are motionless and seesaws stilled,
empty slides and monkey-bars, sandbox void
of kids, just a few ants trudging back and forth
delivering tiny litter.
He listens for an echo of the laughter of toddlers
imploring: “push me higher, up to the sky!”
He longs to hear silly giggles, kids dizzily
whirling round doing summersaults, handsprings,
playing hide and seek, and catch me if you can.
There’s no one left to hunt for turtles, frogs
and salamanders, toss horseshoes, play croquet
or badminton and while away long afternoons
playing monopoly drunk on lemonade
and knock- knock jokes.
Losing track of the time since he left his watch
in the fridge, he heads for home with a compass
gone awry in search of familiar signposts he’s
unable to find, forgetting he has to pee,
he mindlessly lets go and wets himself.
Sitting on a curb crying like a lost child
he waits for somebody to find him.
Milton P. Ehrlich 199 Christie St. Leonia, N.J. 07605.