The Gift of the Trowel

My youngest brother, Christopher, died suddenly on December 11, 2024. He was 47 years old, 12 years younger than myself. He was full of life, mentored and trained by my father as a mason and followed in his footsteps, as one who builds things of stone, brick and cement, with the work of his hands. He left behind a daughter and son, a mother whose heart is broken, four older siblings, and hundreds of people who loved and admired him and his work.

As when my father died five years ago, I struggled to make meaning of his leaving this earth with the rest of us behind. There must be something that is to be done to carry their legacy of who they were forward. What is it that he wants me to do? To be?

I held one of his treasured and very used cement trowels in my hand and I knew. Everything he made was out in the world for all to see – it would last for decades. Centuries perhaps. Banks, homes and schools. His work is a gift to be admired.

I wasn’t doing that.

I filled notebooks of writing, every day pages filled, rarely sharing with the world my work. A blog with long seasons of neglect. A few academic articles published. He was telling me, after his death, put it out there – before it is too late. I’m 59 years old. Get to work. Get-er-done. He would be my guide, my biggest cheerleader, my mentor and teacher.

So, here I am, writing poems for my brother so he knows what he’s left behind. So, he knows his influence. So, he knows he is loved and will not be forgotten.

The Gift from the Trowel (poem #1 for Christopher)

What can I make of all this?
All that he left behind?
His daughter, his son.
A mother whose prayers
gave the wrong answer.

All the tools of the maker -
concrete crusted saws and rusty blades,
missing drill bits and duct-taped cords.
Scattered and strewn here and there.

His trowel sits alone . . .
now out of the dance.

Like the brush of a painter,
the pen of a poet,
or the knife of a Maplewood carver -
this tool of the artist,
now idle and still
is nothing without the art-maker.

My fingers embrace
the gray, faded, handle,
curling tightly where his would've been.
I feel his soft hand blanket warm over mine
as he decides to take over as guide.

His voice whispers so calmly, so wise and so brave -
and says - Shari-boo - Big Sis -

it's your turn.

2 thoughts on “The Gift of the Trowel

  1. Dearest!!You have been on my mind, and then you appear in my inbox. I am sooooo sad to hear of your brother. Bless you!! What a pondering: How, then, shall I live?? I want to tell you why you have been on my mind. Finally, last year I succumbed and saw the broadway play Wicked. Maybe you remember my rant when we met 12 years ago about how much I hated the book. It was a visceral experience for me, talking about it with other aspiring writers, that I could do a better job of retelling than his wordy, nihilistic man-drivel.     And it inspired me to write. Such an important weekend for me. My first/only meeting with Dr. Wayne Dyer; my first meeting and then ongoing work with Kelly Notoras (KN Literary), and meeting YOU, who introduced me to art and Lifebook. You. An incredibly important connection in my life.  I finally saw the movie—so sweet—a couple of days ago, the star-studded Wicked.  Two things I want to mention. I have my first fiction in beta reader stage. It’s a magical realism/literary fiction about grief and transformation, about hope and magic. It’s a short book—51k words— and if you feel you are in the mood for a deep-ish, humor-ish feel-good book about grief, I’d be happy to send you the work-in-progress epub. I have an agent looking at it, too!! Second, I want to make sure you know I am a book doula—I help people self-publish their books. Every single first draft I have written I have printed a copy (blurb or amazon). It is soooo satisfying. Perhaps you have a book or two on the edges. Don’t let “I don’t know how” get in your way. (You may have seen my post about the 12 non-fiction books I’ve published. I have 1st drafts of 8 fiction. Actually, 2 of them I have poured tons of $$ for dev editors.)  Third, just thank you. You are dear to me.  —Deanna 

    Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPhone

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a reply to Shari Daniels Cancel reply