Storytime with Hallie

A Journey of Life, Church & More


Portals: A Poem

By Hallie J Carl

Do you dream about me?
I dream about you.
My eyes flutter awake in the morning,
discerning if it was a memory or not.
It causes me to shake.

In my dream last night,
you yelled at me that I didn’t help you.
Then you came and gave me a kiss on my head,
like a mother to a child.
It causes me to shutter.

In my disorienting dream,
you watched me walk through familiar spaces as a stranger.
Unknown and unseen.
A wisp of who I used to be.
It causes me to crumble.


But when I awake from the dream
reality hits me with a flood.
I search each day
for new markers, new moments.
Trying to not look back.

Grief is a new friend,
one I had not previously known this closely.
It’s constant protection of my body and mind,
helps me to cope and make sense of the mourning.
I have no energy to look forward or back.

“I cannot change the things that happened
I can only learn and move forward,” they say.
But their words haunt me
because my brain and heart are not forward,
they are fighting the urge to look back.


So today I start over
as I did the day before
and as I will tomorrow.
Looking not ahead or behind but right now.
Turning pain into a portal.

I stumble into memories
of moments that hold great value.
They dance in my mind,
weaving around like a vine invading a foundation.
Turning pain into a portal.

There’s a bench overlooking a stream
trees rooted and tall around it.
A person sits, head down and weeping,
another person joins them.
Turning pain into a portal.




5 responses to “Portals: A Poem”

  1. Sherry Powell Avatar
    Sherry Powell

    Hallie beautifully sad I feel your pain my grief for the loss of my husband it’s much like this. Love to you

    Liked by 2 people

  2. Oh my Dear Hallie Girl. You wrote this perfectly – absolutely perfectly. I feel your pain everyday but I know you will come to me when you need too. I ask The Lord every day to give all 4 of you the Strength that you need – Peace in your hearts – Precious healing & Hope for your futures. Oh Hal, I love you all so much xoxox

    Like

  3. Hallie. Wow. This was excellent.

    “Grief is a new friend,
    one I had not previously known this closely.
    It’s constant protection of my body and mind,
    helps me to cope and make sense of the mourning.
    I have no energy to look forward or back.“

    Wow. I felt this. Thank you.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Thank you so much. So glad it could resonate to you too.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. Suzanne Campbell Avatar
    Suzanne Campbell

    So true and poinet (sp?).
    Lay in bed in the morning upon waking and find the grace to get out of bed just one more day. Then, get up. Then ask for the grace to get cleaned up and dressed and to venture out of the bedroom and into the “real” world, fraght with dangers. Then, do only what absolutely has to get done, taking one breath, one step at a time. Every day, do only what you have to, and be good to yourself and your family. Every day, find the grace to leave the bedroom. It feels like dying at first, I know. But the grace to take the next step is there, every time. Some days, you may not make it out of bed, but that’s OK, too. The pain will ease over time; pain ends. You may never understand it all, but understanding is not required for the pain to ease. There will always be a mark where the blade went in, and a tender spot, but the violence of the initial dagger thrust will ease. There will always be grace and true love for you all.

    Liked by 1 person

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About Me

My name is Hallie Carl. I am a wife (to Lee), mom (to Caleb and Isaiah) and the two things I am most passionate about are books (so many) and dogs (Enzo, Tonks and Ahsoka).

I formerly worked as a Pastor, where I was passionate about leading and guiding women in their walks and through hard things. I also loved reading and teaching the Bible.

I care deeply for the overlooked and misunderstood. I believe each person on earth deserves to be treated with value, empathy, compassion and love, even at our most unlovely moments.

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