When I die, let them write about all the mistakes I've made. Let them mention how I failed at keeping the house clean, or finishing things that I could not make a garden grow nice vegetables like my sister. Or spell. Tell them I loved to write but those words and their spelling. . . Tell them I sometimes paid a bill late and had late fees, and overdue library books and that I did not always answer the phone when it rang so I put it on silent to not hear it ring Let them mention that I've damaged cars by filling them up with oil and let black smoke trail behind me and couldn't run a TV remote or the VCR, or pretty much anything with buttons. They can note how my teenage children snuck out of the house at night and I never knew - some mother I am to not have a clue Let them say I was tired, or lazy, or daydreamed a lot, or whatever it looked like to you. I don't care. Tell them whatever you want But do let them know that I cared and I loved the best and that messing up was part of the plan. This poem was inspired by Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer's poem: AFTER MY FRIEND PHYLLIS SHOWS ME THE NEW YORK TIMES OBITUARY HEADLINE: 'LOU MICHAELS, ALL-PURPOSEM PLAYER, DIES AT 80, MISSED KICKS IN '69 SUPER BOWL'. Writing and sharing a poem a day ~ "The writing is inhaling and the sharing is exhaling. They don't have to be good, they just have to be true." ~Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer
