Visiting

On the walk to my grandmother’s grave,

my mother says she’d like to be buried in a cemetery

by a lake where the family could go to have picnics.

 

I nod, like I understand cemeteries. Like I understand

my mother’s need to visit and be visited, as if this is the only way

we can still talk to the dead (as if there are no poems).

 

Like I can imagine burying my mother, my husband,

myself. Like I can imagine my grave as anything

but grown over and haloed by vultures.

 

I’ve been told there’s a place prepared for me

with many rooms. No one in Heaven is going to look

for these bodies, forgotten like faded nightgowns.

 

A grave says nothing, remembers nothing.

There are so many stones grown over,

engraved names that fill with dirt and time.

 

A woman on the radio cried when she read a letter

found in an abandoned home from a dying woman

giving birth to a son no one knew about.

 

I worry about her, the radio woman said.

Abandonment is worse than death—it means

no one cares. I’m afraid of the clean slabs

 

ripped-down homes make, afraid of becoming one:

paved over, no one would know I was ever here

(isn’t that why there are poems?).

 

I pull back the grass. In my notebook,

I write down names

I’ve never heard before. Carry them

 

in my mouth as we drive home

like hard candies and whisper them

sweet under my breath.


Meg Eden Kuyatt teaches creative writing at colleges and writing centers. She is the author of the 2021 Towson Prize for Literature winning poetry collection “Drowning in the Floating World” and the forthcoming “obsolete hill” (Fernwood Press, 2026) and children’s novels including the Schneider Family Book Award Honor-winning “Good Different,” and “The Girl in the Walls” (Scholastic, 2025). Find her online at megedenbooks.com.