BY BRIANA BARTENIEFF |
There’s nothing quite like it to be compared to
At least in my lifetime
But the only thing I can relate it to is nothing new
It’s
The stages of grief
Instead of watching the coffin disappear into hollow ground
You’re trapped within it
Pacing
Wondering
What it would be like
To breathe once again
Something fresh
Something new
We knew it was coming
Got a sense of Denial
But we’ve been diagnosed with a case of the American Dream
Meaning it won’t hurt us if we don’t let it be seen
If we work
And watch from afar
Saying “silly children it is not our problem, but someone else’s, someone who’s different from us. Poorer and dumber, and one who doesn’t have the luck that we do in our water streams.”
But when our faith runs out
And this terrible killer lies itself in our filthy lands
We get Angry at those people who suffered with it first
Because where’s the fun if we do not have someone to blame
Humans need a reason for their own naiveté
Guilt does not run in our eyes
Until we see a loved one die
Now we are the one thing we hate the most
The victim
So we beg and plead
Bargaining for a better deal
To beg the devil just for another day in the sun
While ignoring the pleas from the elderly hum
To try and wash the blood off our hands
The blood of those who we ignore
As the poison scent of youth intoxicates the sweetest of our generation
But now the lowly caged bird sings sadly in its home
Grieving of the life it was supposed to know
Instead of seeing the blue skies
Or hearing the voices of the happiest aglow
Its new definition of the world fits in its palm
All on a tiny screen
With the news drowning out the howling of`true loneliness
Time ends up losing its deity
And ends up producing a great tragedy
Of lives lost both physically and mentally
Because a death does not begin at the end of a heart and its beat
It also begins when you can’t bring yourself to your feet
Yet as time moves on
We start to see things differently
As we sober up from the luxury of excess freedom
We Accept that this is history
That we’re living in it
Even though it’s a hell of a monstrosity
We appreciate distance for it can be lifesaving
And although most of us don’t know someone who’s died
I think our disregard of saving humanity has
I think that we now know how important life is
Even if it is a stranger
Because at the end of the day we all got a heart and soul
And by knowing the importance of that
Our importance
It will get us all through this virus
The virus of forgotten kindness
Bartenieff is a student at Purchase College, State University of New York.
Being part of a theater royal family I’m not surprised at her perception. Even as a little girl I had the pleasure of seeing her perform my words at at LES Festival or 3.Her grandmother & grandfather have kept Downtown theater alive for decades & I’m sure she’ll be integral in keeping it so in years to come. Avanti.