(In Remembrance): Cast Out
By Michelle Garren Flye
It’s all over but the crying now.
We never knew that would happen. We didn’t see the loss of hope, the loss of growth, the loss of who we are. How could we?
Even as we witnessed its birth.
We clustered around televisions and fell to our knees and cried and prayed and cursed. We angrily threw a flag over the destruction.
We swore we’d make them pay.
Blinded by rage, we fight a war no one can win. We send our soldiers to deserts of ash and blood. We lose what’s left of freedom in revenge.
And what of those born after?
Born into a world of anger and suspicion, how can our children ever be innocent? We guard and shield, but they know and despair.
Do you remember what it was like—before?
Before the hate, the fear, the constant defending against evil. Doesn’t it look like a golden age now? Doesn’t it look like a garden?
It’s all over but the crying now.
Cast out, left to drown in hot tears like jet fuel streaming from the eyes of a nation. Did it melt our core? Do we only wait to fall?
Regret tastes like ash, blood, desert sand. And tears.