One day death will come,
not with thunder,
nor with the solemn certainty
our younger hearts once imagined.
It will arrive quietly,
like evening settling upon an empty garden,
or mist wandering through a bamboo forest,
asking nothing,
taking everything
one gentle breath at a time.
Before death comes forgetting.
The names loosen first,
falling from the branches of the mind
like autumn leaves
that never find their way home.
A daughter becomes
a familiar stranger.
A husband,
a smile without a face.
An old photograph
becomes a gathering of unknown souls
whose laughter still echoes,
though no one remembers the joke.
Time,
that patient thief,
does not steal all at once.
It removes us
one yesterday at a time.
Until our lives become
a library of blank pages,
the bindings still intact,
the stories carried away
on winds no one can follow.
We search the empty rooms
of our own minds,
certain there was something precious
just beyond the next doorway.
We wander the halls,
wheelchairs whispering across polished floors,
pilgrims with no destination,
looking for a recognition
that might anchor us
to one more fleeting moment.
Sometimes a melody remains.
Sometimes the scent of tea.
Sometimes the warmth
of a hand held decades ago.
Love is often the last language
memory forgets to erase.
And perhaps,
when the fog grows thickest,
we are not as alone
as we believe.
For there sits our younger self,
patient as the morning,
kneeling beside us.
The face we have forgotten
is our own.
The eyes are bright with beginnings.
The hands are steady,
untouched by the trembling years.
"Don't be afraid,"
the younger voice whispers.
"I've been with you all along."
"I can't remember you,"
the old woman replies.
"You don't have to."
Outside,
the memories lift together
like birds heading south for winter.
A first kiss.
A wedding dance.
Tiny shoes on Christmas morning.
The sound of children
running through the house.
One by one
they disappear
into a sky growing golden.
"I tried to keep them,"
she says.
"I know."
"I've lost everything."
The younger woman smiles.
"No."
"You are confusing memory
with love."
The old woman looks
at her weathered hands.
They seem almost transparent now.
"So what remains?"
The answer comes
as softly as snowfall.
"The kindness you gave."
"The tears you shared."
"The people who became themselves
because you once loved them."
"Those things
were never stored
inside memory."
"They were written
into the world."
Even death
cannot erase
what has already become
part of another soul.
The room grows dim.
The photographs lose their names.
The clock forgets
why it keeps ticking.
Outside,
the last bird
vanishes beyond the horizon.
The younger woman
takes the older woman's hand.
Neither speaks.
There is nothing left
that words can carry.
Only warmth.
Only presence.
Only the quiet promise
that no one walks
the final road alone.
And when the last memory
finally opens its fingers
and lets go,
when even our own name
drifts away
like smoke upon the evening air,
perhaps what greets us
is not darkness.
But the child we once were.
The young woman we used to be.
The young man
who still remembers every dream.
Smiling.
Patient.
Holding our hand.
Walking us gently home,
while time,
its work finally finished,
falls silent.
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