Excerpt for Living with AIDS - Dying of AIDS - Being Remembered by Hans Wiesendanger, available in its entirety at Smashwords



Living with AIDS

Dying of AIDS

Being remembered


Our Son

Utmost Helplessness

A Little

A Smiling Face

Nights

A Father's Heart

A Fighter

Doomed to Die

Your Stubborn Soul

No Hope

Watching You Die

Dried Rose

Three years

What You Could Have Accomplished

We'll Always Remember

Anniversary

Remembering You

Five Years Ago

Face in a Passing Wheelchair

Mail to Our Dead Son

Hope -- Only for Others!

Kinetic Sculpture

Memories of You

Merry Christmas???

His Birthday

Your Grave

Going through the Stuff You Left behind



© 1988 – 2001 by Hans U. D. Wiesendanger






Our Son


So full of life

But doomed to die young,

A piece of us

Our son

Our son

So full of promise

But never will it blossom

Our joy foreclosed

Our son

So full of love

For ever to remember

The love of us

Our son



The Utmost Helplessness


To hear our son telling us

He is at peace with the certainty of dying soon

Is being hit by a tidal wave

With torrents of mind numbing emotions

Buffeting us this way and that,

Choking our breath, a vise clamping our chest

That will not loose

Driving rivers of tears through our brain.


The utmost helplessness we ever felt.

We don't know how on earth we can cope.

Will life return? Will peace find our heart

Today or tomorrow or ever?

And will we be able to laugh

In some new future? Will our life go on

While his is blown out

Like a candle blown out in the wind?


We must forget our cross:

His is much bigger; his load is unbearably hard

For him to bear with his waning strength.

Yet he goes on living with purpose,

Taking each day as it comes,

Maintaining dignity up to the last

As best as he can.

May his heart find peace in our love.




A Little Hope


I think of death a lot these days,

Of God's unfathomable ways,

Of pain and sorrow, love and tears

And wonder if he really hears


I think of love a lot these nights

When all is still and out the lights.

When love my loved one can't protect

He'll face his agonies direct.


I think of him when I am lying

Awake in bed and know he's dying.

And yet I know I have to cope

And so grope for a little hope.


A little hope to soothe his pain,

A little hope to ease his strain,

A little hope to see him live

And perish the alternative!





A Smiling Face


A quiet life is what I lead

People would say, I guess,

But deep inside I ache and bleed

From hidden pain and stress.


A cheerful front's what people see.

They never would believe

That there is so much pain in me,

That underneath I grieve.


A smiling face is what I show

To mask my inner pain

But, in my gut, I really know

I must try to keep sane.


So smile I will, smile while I can,

Suppress all inner strife,

Deny how troubled, sad I am

And go on with my life!




Nights


How often do I wake up and cry

In the middle of the night

And wonder why

I'm filled with fright?


How often do I feel my life's in vain

When I cannot help my son

To ease his pain?

It can't be done.


How often do I wake up and pray

For my son that he may heal

And that he may

Know how I feel.




A Father's Heart


What volume has a father's heart

For grief, adversity and pain?
What can it take, and what will start

It flowing over under strain?


How rugged is a father's mind

When beaten, stressed, devoid of hope,

When hurt, despair and sadness grind

Him down and make it hard to cope?


How much pain must a father stand

Because his son is struck with AIDS?

Who'll grieve with him, give him a hand

When utter hopelessness pervades?


Who can repair a father's heart

And who can ease its searing pain

When finally it breaks apart

Because it knows hope is in vain?







A Fighter

My son is a fighter. That's why he's alive,

Refusing to die on AIDS' terms;

He'll struggle, resist, battle, fight and connive

To beat all the HIV germs.


My son is persistent. He never will quit

Although there's no reason for hope.

He will overcome and put up with all shit;

Whatever comes up, he does cope.


My son is a hero, courageous, unsung,

His character's set, strong and clear.

In wisdom he's old though in years he is young,

Refined by discomfort and fear.


My son's a good human to love and respect

For living with purpose and zest;

He's just skin and bones but his posture's erect,

Courageously facing each test.


My son is alive and refuses to break.

How long he may live we don't know.

We're learning from him that ,whatever's at stake,

Keep pushing as far's you can go!



Doomed to Die

Although he's young and doomed to die

His life has meaning, purpose, goals.

His life is precious and his spirits high

And what he can, his will controls.


Adversity he knows in all

Its variations. Forced to bear

Indignities, pains, tortures large and small

With fortitude, without despair,


He lives with purpose, even zest,

Enjoys small pleasures when he can.

And labors hard to always make the best

Of what he faces like a man.


We all should look at life like he,

To make the most of it right now.

With such resolve and with such strong esprit

We would be better off, somehow!




Your Stubborn Soul


Even though you die young

Your life is not in vain.

We all have learned from you

By sharing in your pain.


Even if you can't claim

Great deeds of much import,

Your life is not in vain

Even if it's cut short.


Even if you can't see

Why we'd be proud of you:

You've taught us all to be

Persistent, strong, and true.


Even if you must leave

This world and all its dole,

When left alone to grieve

We’ll miss your stubborn soul!





No Hope


Knowing that there is no hope

We get used to, since we must,

And we learn that we must cope

And in God his future trust.


Comes a time when he feels better,

Eating well and gaining weight,

Active like a young jet-setter,

Seeming to recuperate.


Hope rekindles like a flower

Blooms when after draught comes rain,

But our prayers lack all power

And he falls to hell again.


Budding hope is dashed to bits

And we're back to sadness, gloom,

At the far end of our wits,

Downed by the impending doom.



Watching You Die


Holding your hand

I watch you die

Drawing your last

And labored breath

Slipping away

No longer here

Leaving behind

Body and life

Your pain now gone

Resting in peace


Leaving behind

This father's heart

Filled to the brim

With the absence

Of your dear soul

I can't let go

Yet of your hand

Still feeling warm

but bound to cool

And then get cold

While mine stays warm





Dried Rose


Dead and completely dry

But not decayed, not sagging

Upright, enduring

Stands the rose,

Cut off your bush

In glorious beauty,

But now a shadow

Of its former glory

No longer living

But still hanging on,

Wanting to be remembered

For what it used to be:

As I remember you







Three Years


Three years ago, we watched you die.

It took a day, that's all.

We couldn't even say goodbye;

There was no way to stall.


Your didn't have to suffer much

And you were not awake.

We don't know if you felt our touch

And felt our hearts a-quake.


In just one everlasting day

You left this humankind

And slowly, slowly slipped away...

But leaving us behind!







What You Could Have Accomplished


Three years ago we watched you lying

Still in your bed, as you were dying,

Holding your hands as they grew colder

Till finally your life was ended,

Your soul eternally suspended.

And suddenly we felt much older.


For three years now, we've lived without you

But every day we think about you

And what you could and would have been.

Your gifts and talents, how they would have

Blossomed and flowered, what you could have

Accomplished to be loved and seen.









We’ll always Remember


More than three years have passed since in our arms you died,

Having decided that you'd suffered enough pain

And wanted now to die with dignity and pride

Instead of being nursed to suffering again.


And not one day has passed I didn’t think of you,

Living tenaciously, although there was no hope

Through all adversity, to your own being true:
If no one else endured, it would be you who'd cope!


And not one day will pass that I would not recall

Your stubborn will to live with dignity and zest,

To live life to the hilt, inspiring me and all

That for your sake we must all do our best




Anniversary


With Christmas passed, the day comes near

That our son died 4 years ago,

An anniversary we fear

Which sinks our spirits very low.


For him it was a great relief

To end his suffering and pain.

For us, it's never ending grief

And sad and lonely we remain.


Yet, it's a comfort to recall him

His character, his love, his care

And though we knew what would befall him

We're thankful we could give him care.


We live our own lives day to day.

If he can see us, he'll be glad

That we are finding our own way

To cherish what, in him, we had.








Remembering You


It's years ago that you lay dying

And left us all behind.

So many tears we have been crying.

You're always on our mind:


If we see beauty, we recall how

You would have loved it and enjoyed.

But we can't see such joy at all, now

That your short life has been destroyed.


If we see sickness, we remember

How sick you were, in how much pain

Until one day in late December

You died and left us to complain.


If we see others that must suffer

We think of you, how you were coping,

How with persistence you grew tougher,

And strong against all odds kept hoping.


If we see others doomed to die

Our hearts are with them in their sorrow

But it will be for you we cry

As yesterday, today, tomorrow.





Five Years Ago


Five years ago this day, he died

The hardest day we ever had

But we do know, deep down inside,

He would not want us to be sad.


Five years ago, we're left behind

To live without him evermore

But in our memory we find

His smiles that we used to adore.


Five years ago, his life ebbed out

While ours keeps going on for now.

If he could see us, there's no doubt

He'd say we shouldn't cry, somehow






Your Face in a Passing Wheelchair


Today I saw your haggard face

Skin stretched tight over bones

Etched deep with pains and groans

But radiant with inner grace


Young man in wheelchair riding by

Legs thin with knobby knees

Stamped by your dread disease

His body week but spirits high


So much to bear, so much to fight

In that face to be seen

Gray skin but eyes serene

A sad yet an inspiring sight









Mail to Our Dead Son


Though almost six years since you died,

We still get mail addressed to you

From people who want verified

Your current address, what you do.

Wanting to sell you, send your money,

You'll like their wares, they're sure you will.

For us, it isn't very funny;

It makes us miss you harder, still.









Hope -- Only for Others!


The scientists have toiled with dedication

And found, researched, prepared new medication

But they are years too late for you.

When you were ill, there was no hope

You knew you'd die; you had to cope

And there was nothing we could do.


You lived to wait for early death

And suffered hard with every breath

In sadness and in constant pain.

But now, for others hope's arisen

That they may heal and shed their prison

And live a normal life again.


O how we wish you still were here

To share new hope and lose old fear,

To live again in normal bliss.

But you're long gone. We're left without you

And we can only think about you,

Part of our life we'll always miss.




Kinetic Sculpture


Kinetic Sculpture, quiet motion

Its clamshells turning in the breeze

Soothingly and with steady ease

Like ripples in life’s pulsing ocean.


Reminding us of him, departed

After long years of agony, despair.

With only memories to share

Our lonely lives now heavy-hearted.


We sit and watch the sculpture swaying

If he were here, he would approve

And love to see it slowly move.

We think of him and do our praying.







Memories of You


Time to be happy, to be sad?

This is your birthday but you’re dead.

It was a short life that you had

Before you died in your sickbed.


We’re sad you’re not with us these days

To share our joys. You made us proud!

Your talents shone in many ways,

Your mind and art richly endowed.


Years have passed since you died, and yet

We think of you most all our days

We’re sure we never can forget

Your love and charm and caring ways.


Our hurt of missing you is deep;

Unlike you, it will never die

And memories is all we keep

As days, months, years are passing by.





Merry Christmas???


Our merry Christmas will be sad

When thinking of the son we had

Whom we now have no more.

You still have me; I still have you,

So there’s no reason to be blue

Or let our hearts be sore.


We still have family and love

And good friends when push comes to shove.

For him, it was a great release.

You know he’d want his mom and pappy

To think of him and to be happy.

Although we miss him, he’s at peace.









His Birthday


His birthday is tomorrow.

Eight years ago he died.

Our life is full of sorrow

For him we’ve cried and cried


His birthday we’ll remember

To our own dying days

Twenty ninth of December

Is when we parted ways


His birthday has much meaning

Memories never dim

The family convening

To think with love of him


In one late Christmas season

He left this world of strife

His birthday is a reason

To celebrate his life




Your Grave


Broad bands of breakers rolling in

White curly foam absorbed in sand

White seagulls overhead all lolling in

The easy breeze above the sunbright strand


Far out some fishing boats a-gliding

Hard to discern their steady motion

Close in a surfer on a wavetop riding

Serenity of peaceful ocean


Your ashes in this sea were cast

Dropped from a plane into a wave

No future for you -- only past

The sea your vast eternal grave.






Sorting through the Stuff You Left behind...


Sorting through the boxes, folders, other stuff you left behind

Sketches, photos, paintings, writings, records here of every kind

All the things you made, created, shaped, described and left I find

And it blows my mind


O what memories of you such sifting through your artworks brings

I recall in many cases just when you did make those things

Stirred emotions feelings outcries pains glows tremors whisperings

Memory that stings







© 1983-2001 by Hans U. D. Wiesendanger


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