My hands wrapped tightly
Around the cool aluminum tubes
Of her walker
So that I have to bend over slightly
To offer stability
For her, now stiff,
Puppet like movements
My dad is on the other side
Showing no emotion
Just down to business
His unchanging nature
Somehow comforting
What used to feel impenetrable
Is now something I can lean into
She can lean on.
“I want to walk in the snow!”
Everything now through a
This may be the last time
Lens
Our harmonic trio pushed forward
A song we knew
Over the threshold
My foot
Awkwardly holds open the door
Her face, still familiar
Despite the glassy flatness in her eyes
The lines around her mouth
Waves of skin
Now taken the shape
Of many years
Telling her story
Now expressionless expression
As her bo
dy has become
A prison.
Outside
In the snow
She emerged; spirit alive
“Farther, I want to go farther!”
She was, all at once
A child, a woman
My mother, my daughter.
My father and I
A reluctant team
Steadied her
To the end of the driveway
We were her limit
Helping her turn
And Return
Over the threshold
Into the warmth
Where, once settled in her chair
She resumed herself
And asked me to straighten the rug
The old sound of demand
Now a voice claiming its soul
I am tired
I said,
I wrapped my words in love
And left the room
Willing myself
To Love Myself along this journey.
Janet Elizabeth Hartwick Sterk
2.4.2026

Cynthia Melvin
Beautiful story of you three
HealingJourneys
Thank you Cindy. It is actually an adaptation of a story I heard from someone else. Her story felt like a portal into a universal story that many of us would know in one way or another. After all, we are all connected. Our stories share so many similarities. We can learn from one another.
Janet
Bev
Lovely…always a delight to see you pop up in my inbox
Bev Bachel
Lovely…always a delight to see you pop up in my inbox