Roseanne Freed
Photo of Mahalia and Roseanne Freed by Reuben Freed
Roseanne Freed was born in South Africa, raised her children in Canada, and now lives with her husband in Los Angeles. Retired from the J. Paul Getty Museum, she is currently an outdoor educator who shares her love of nature with school children by leading hikes in the Santa Monica Mountains. Her poems have appeared in Blue Heron Review, Contrary Magazine, Lothlorien, MacQueens Quinterly, ONE ART, Silver Birch Press, Verse-Virtual, and Writing in a Woman’s Voice. She’s been nominated for the Best of the Net. Her poem, A Poem Begins With a Lump In The Throat was the 10th most read poem on One Art in 2022. She is currently shopping her first chapbook, The Mouth Feels Lonely and Needs To Chew which is a collection of poems that explores her feelings of grief after her daughter, Mahalia, died at the age of forty-one.
I fell in love with Roseanne’s honest visceral, raw poetry from the moment I read her powerful poignant poem in the April 2022 issue of Verse-Virtual:
The hardest part?
Your life will never be the same,
Suzanne said after my daughter passed away.
The hardest part?
The rawness of grief.
The nightmare doesn’t end with the rising sun.
No cups of tea can cure
the inconsolable ache or fatigue.
Though her death wasn’t sudden
it wasn’t expected,
Cancer in someone as healthy
as Mahalia, didn’t make sense.
After the diagnosis her message to us,
Don’t weep or be depressed
I am determined to fight this monster.
And win.
I believed her.
We all did.
Don’t you have to be old to die?
I prayed.
Yes, the atheist prayed.
When the oncologist said,
Only a few weeks,
a brave exterior hid her fear
of dying. In constant pain,
she took opioids
so she could hug her small children.
I altered my prayers, offered
to shave my hair,
forgo meat, alcohol, chocolates…
She died.
The hardest part?
Learning to say—
May her memory be for a blessing,
about my child.
In my comments to the V-V community, I shared that I too had lost a child and the hardest part is there is nothing you can do to stop death or bring them back. Since then, Roseanne and I, both insomniacs, have spent day after day and night after night bonding, by sharing our poetry and our daily lives through email.
Roseanne not only writes from the heart, but she tugs on my heart strings and shatters my heart in the process as she shares her life story in her signature writing style that no poet can duplicate.
I am honored that she shared with me these unpublished poems baring the truths and secrets of her life, the first two from her manuscript, The Mouth Feels Lonely and Needs to Chew.
Our Time Together, Too Short
My sweet Mahalia, born after two days labor
with all those lucky sevens—
17/7/78 at 7:07pm weighing 7lbs 7 oz,
the baby who grew fat and healthy
nursing at my breast for a whole year,
but I only have one photo,
the one-year-old who crawled into the fridge
to get at the pickles and olives,
but didn’t care for cake, or candy,
the little cutie (she was always small)
with an infectious laugh, who loved
the hot sun and running around in the nude,
the inquisitive, intelligent child
with a remarkable early command of language,
who’d put a book in my hand, climb
onto my lap, and wait for me to read,
her favorites stories from age two
were of the two Peters—Rabbit and Pan—
the munchkin who hung upside down
from the top of the jungle gym
her dad built under the cherry tree,
the toothless Tinkerbelle
with a bag of Halloween
candy which she forgot to eat,
the girl who rode bikes and horses,
also hiked, swam, and canoed
in Northern lakes every summer,
the young woman passionate about healing
and herbs, who became a Naturopathic Doctor,
birthed her two children at home,
but never cared about cars, preferring
to ride her bike – even to chemo
dates in the Canadian winter.
I loved her even when I didn’t love her.
Hold the sadness and pain of samsara in your heart.
Then the warrior can make a proper cup of tea.
—Chogyam Trungpa
You died. It took me a while to understand
I hadn’t caused your cancer — We all die.
We all live with grief. They say I’ll laugh
again one day — My friend Anne
committed suicide at Niagara Falls, her kids
same ages as mine. A picture taken two decades
ago at Niagara Falls, my parents with my uncle
visiting from Israel. Religious, he drank his tea
Middle Eastern style in a glass with lemon.
For the Sabbath — Shabbat Shalom —
my mother had to keep the bathroom light
on for twenty-four hours. You always left
two or three cups of tea around the house
and we daren’t throw those sips away. Rooibos,
with rice milk. What a fuss when our religious
niece visited us. We had to cover a shelf
in the fridge with paper towels for her kosher
ready-roast-chicken. Age eight, you silently
watched as she ate her special food on paper
plates with plastic cutlery. Not wanting to waste
we had her leftovers the next day —But Mummy,
you said, It tastes of chicken. The F.D.A
warns two ounces of black licorice daily
for two weeks can cause heart rhythm problems.
It’s my favorite candy. Am I eating too much?
I know you didn’t treat family, but you’re a doctor.
I still have the licorice caplets you gave me —
For energy, you said.
Where are you? Please call.
Listen. You will hear me.
I found a postcard you sent us with a picture of a loon:
paddling in a small lake
we came upon a moose munching things,
stopping to watch her we heard loons
and the wind in the silence,
while the bugs feasted on us.
Paddling with you and the loons
across those silent lakes,
I try to hear you.
Why didn’t I know
I’d need to remember your laughter?
Letter to My Sister After I Nearly Drowned
The most important thing is to remember the most important thing.
— Zen teacher Suzuki Roshi
to watch me. What did you know
about protecting your two-year-old
sister? You rode your bike around
the hotel pool. I followed. No one told us
not to. It was winter—the swim pool
a filthy pond, thick with detritus
and frogs. You heard the splash
as I fell into the deep end,
knew I was going to drown
and you’d be blamed—so you hid.
Thankfully not for long. I think.
Roseanne fell in the water, you told
Mom, who couldn’t swim,
who screamed for our two older
brothers—age ten and twelve—
who hearing her hysteria ran
over, and jumped in fully clothed
to save me. Lifeless when pulled out
the cold water. Mom wept,
We’ve lost her, but our brothers
intuitively placed me face down
and pressed out the water.
I coughed, breathed, we all cried,
and Dad rushed home from work.
The nearest doctor in that African
town was the pharmacist,
A miracle, he said.
God works mysteriously, Mom said.
Our mother whom everyone agreed
was a loving, wonderful parent,
told us kids at her 90th birthday celebration
she hadn’t jumped in to try save me,
because she couldn’t disobey
her own mother, who taught her,
never get into water when menstruating.
A confession. Not an apology.
And you carried the guilt all this time.
Thank you for not drowning,
you told me a few years ago.
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