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Xlibris US
David A Love Song
David A Love Song
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This book began as my therapy after the tragic loss of my son. The words are exactly as they poured from my heart, sometimes so quickly I could not keep up and get them down on paper, and sometimes, with great effort to use exactly the right word or words, to express the emotion I was feeling.
The work is actually in two sections, the first of which is more of a prose form,
the second is a more traditional poetic form. That is just the way my thoughts seemed to express themselves at the time. Perhaps, the larger, the more global thoughts came in the beginning when the whole event was harder to grasp, and as time went on, my thoughts coalesced into a more concise format as I was able to perceive the subtleties of what I was processing.
Whether or not a purist would judge this work as "poetry" in the true literary sense, is not critical to me. What is important is that the reader is able to follow my journey from despair to acceptance. That the reader sees grief not as a straight line, but as a progression of steps, a few forward, a few back, and then forward again. With each of these forward steps being hard won, but lasting once they have been achieved.
It is also my hope that the reader will be able to integrate his or her own experience into something that is acceptable to his or her own mind and find the peace that acceptance will bring. Acceptance is not closure. There will always be something or someone that will bring back the pain of any tragedy, but, as time goes on it becomes easier, and, in the end life can be fulfilling and happy, if somewhat bittersweet.
The work is actually in two sections, the first of which is more of a prose form,
the second is a more traditional poetic form. That is just the way my thoughts seemed to express themselves at the time. Perhaps, the larger, the more global thoughts came in the beginning when the whole event was harder to grasp, and as time went on, my thoughts coalesced into a more concise format as I was able to perceive the subtleties of what I was processing.
Whether or not a purist would judge this work as "poetry" in the true literary sense, is not critical to me. What is important is that the reader is able to follow my journey from despair to acceptance. That the reader sees grief not as a straight line, but as a progression of steps, a few forward, a few back, and then forward again. With each of these forward steps being hard won, but lasting once they have been achieved.
It is also my hope that the reader will be able to integrate his or her own experience into something that is acceptable to his or her own mind and find the peace that acceptance will bring. Acceptance is not closure. There will always be something or someone that will bring back the pain of any tragedy, but, as time goes on it becomes easier, and, in the end life can be fulfilling and happy, if somewhat bittersweet.
I wrote this book for myself, to work through my thoughts and feelings after the loss of my son. Now, I hope this book might help someone else deal with his loss and find acceptance.
My goal is that the reader struggling with loss may find his way, not to closure that is
referred to when tragedy occurs, but to acceptance. Acceptance that this event has happened, that it cannot be changed, but that he can live with it. By accepting loss it becomes a part of one's life and enables one to move forward. And, in moving forward there is the possibility of helping someone else, thus making something good out of something bad.
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