dVerse Haibun Monday “Grey”

Those Fictional Greys

Funny thing about long-term memory; it’s like it just happened yesterday. Like when I was remembering my grandmother who departed us nearly 30-years ago. I can see her now. Grandma sitting in a straight-back wooden spindle chair. She sits where the sun breaks through the window but she still feels icy. And it’s just Grandma now; Grandpa’s recently dead. He went out fishing on the 3rd Tuesday of January last year. He threaded a nightcrawler on his hook, dropped the line over the side of the boat, and then had a heart attack. Out there alone on the lake. Floated around for 3-days in grey mist before anyone thought it odd that a rowboat was out there. He froze board-stiff in that rowboat. Someone said he was the oddest shade of grey they’d ever seen. Greyer than winter, some said. Winter’s a widow-maker, Grandma claimed. She looks out the window, sips her Earl Grey tea, and asks for another lap blanket. Her voice is shallow as lapping water. She’s not long for the next world. Asleep or awake, sometimes we can’t tell which when she closes her eyes. Those soft eyelids that disregard the lines between day and night. Sometimes she pretends to be deaf. I suspect that she hears everything that she can’t see. But as I said, it all seems like yesterday. Plus minus those intervening greying years.

like old grey stone,
that blue-eyed cat on her lap.
Alas. Here it ends.

 

 

dVerse Haibun Monday “Grey”. Some of this is fiction; some is not.

26 responses to “dVerse Haibun Monday “Grey””

  1. this is haunting and beautiful

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you, Jane.

      Like

  2. Wow. This is quite a haibun – rich with memories and yet, full of sadness. The blue eyed cat on her lap, the pretending to be deaf….all of it speaks to me. The haiku is heartbreaking.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I would not want to think I’ve broken your tender heart, Toni. This is just where the word ‘grey’ took me. (hug)

      Like

      1. No you did not break my heart dear Misky. Grey can bring tears as well as laughter.

        Liked by 1 person

  3. Very touching story of your grandma and grandpa.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Truly fabulous – the best writing is rooted in some truth.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Grey kept resurfacing but even amidst “those greying years” you are able to delineate the different shades to retell stories of love.

    Liked by 1 person

  6. Very attractive site! Nice time transition. Difficult to let go of that image….

    Liked by 1 person

  7. What an interesting story of your grandfather and grandmother. I love dit.

    Liked by 1 person

  8. Simply loved this. The whole thing as it stands.

    Like

  9. Lovely piece, I liked how time and the present moves and shifts gently in this piece, like the sun across your grandma’s lap – and the haiku, the vivid cat and the grey stone – wonderful images.

    Like

    1. Thank you so very much, Peter.

      Like

  10. Grandparents play such a big role in our lives, Misky, and my memories seem to be always in shades of grey. Such a tragic haibun, Misky. and so well written. I love the description of your grandmother:’She looks out the window, sips her Earl Grey tea, and asks for another lap blanket. Her voice is shallow as lapping water’ and ‘Those soft eyelids that disregard the lines between day and night’.

    Like

    1. I’m glad you enjoyed reading it, Kim. Thanks.

      Liked by 1 person

  11. I like the way this weaves back and forth, past, present, truth, fiction, all a bit grey and blurred at the edges. ‘greyer than winter’ is a really great phrase;

    Liked by 1 person

  12. A lovely vignette of a story that shifts through time, lapping back and forth like the grey waves of the lake.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks, Paul. Glad you enjoyed it.

      Like

  13. What a set of stories weaved together in those greying years…. the grandfather dying when fishing and your grandmother fading, crowned with that wonderful haiku… such great writing.

    Like

    1. Thank you! Great prompts make for easy writing. 😀

      Like

  14. I liked the colors of the haiku, and the simplicity; it reads like a Japanese death poem.

    Like

  15. Grey is the color of transition, and you’ve really captured that, emotionally and spiritually. (K)

    Liked by 1 person

  16. Your memories paint a clear picture here…stunning writing!

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a reply to memadtwo Cancel reply