The doctor came to tell us that he had died  I thought it was just for that day, so I went to bed early and slept  well.
But the next morning I  heard them talking downstairs; apparently he had still died (even though  the doctor wasn’t calling to tell us today).
So it’s gonna  be a few days, I figured; we might as well have a funeral. We drove  hundreds of miles in dozens of cars finding and losing the way ‘round  and ‘round standing ‘round and ‘round, crying, listening, crying  listening standing and standing around.
But when it was over he had still died so there was  nothing to do but drive home. It took hours and then the refrigerator  had broken down. We soon fixed it but he had still died.
And every  night after that I slept as long as I could to give him a chance to not  have died.
But in the morning they were always downstairs and  when I asked if he had still died the answer was always, "Yes."
And so it  went into a week and then it went into two weeks. Eventually it went  into months.
And it kept going.
It wouldn’t stop.
It kept on having happened.
No matter what  I did, it refused to not have happened.
Even if I wrote in my diary about it
Even if I  wrote a poem about it
Even if I forgot about it,
IT didn’t forget about it.
Not for a  second was it caught off guard.
It was as stubborn as the music of the spheres.
It just  wouldn’t let bygones be bygones.
To this day it has happened.
It insists on  having happened.
It will never tire of having happened.
Nothing will  distract it from having happened.
It was more than one day. It was more than one week.
It was more  than months. It was more than years.
And it knew it – ALL the time                 
~ Marion Cohen
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