David P. Brunski, passed away Thursday, Feb. 26, 2009, after a brief battle with brain cancer. He is survived by three grandchildren, Foster Hudson, and Lily and Audrey Howard.
how strange,
to be printed next to death, tethered to a man i barely knew.
only in stories:
bursting through the door in search of me, as a baby,
naively dreaming in my mother’s arms.
“where is my grandson!” was the booming call, the foghorn
chasing after my brown gleaming eyes.
i was transported to the land of his hairy, muscular forearms,
and left there under his watch.
he would gaze at me for hours, and when I was put to bed,
crawling in my palace of dreams, he told my mother
i was going to be an artist.
what clairvoyance
for a man who chastised me on a mini golf course:
seven-year old me, aping the golfers at the masters
my father forced me to watch. perhaps
he was angered by the presumption
that i was in competition
for that green jacket. or perhaps
it was the misunderstanding, the unused intellect
that could not see the difference between this dinky course
and the lush emerald 18-hole. perhaps he was doing me a favor,
recognizing misguided athletic tendencies and
squashing them before they could ferment,
suffocating my fragile artistic soul.
his strength,
so unlike his sensitive, poetic kin, was his pride.
number twenty-seven for the red back raiders,
he would scare away the competition with his calf-lifts,
pulling all the weight the machine would hold with just one leg.
playing until the cancer chained him to the bed, his hockey games
were a colosseum of battle cries and shoulder-bashing.
the Brunski name was nothing if it wasn’t proud, as i could see it,
even if my frail lanky body was a shadow in the legacy of
a construction-worker’s wake.
dying,
my grandfather flirted with the nurses. a lion song
refused to die in his breast unless it took him with it,
and when he passed i had nothing to compare it to:
mourning was not yet in my nature, so i had no sense
of what was lost. “obituary” was missing
from my vocabulary, and as the dust settled and the months turned to years, my grandfather’s mural filled out in my memory.
perhaps if i had known
that my name would appear
under my grandfather’s
in the newspaper,
i would have paid more attention.
