In this day and age
Almost everyone has a tropical love story.
Show of hands–
How many here?
There was a war. Danger.
And there were disapproving fathers
And careers.
And yes, I know that some
Love stories survive them all.
But ours didn’t.
And he didn’t.
So just for a year and a few months
We were in love in a warm climate.
A torn love story with a sad ending
With me as its only living remnant.
Imagine yourself
In that story
Full of hormones and atmosphere
It is a meditation remembering
Sand and moonlight under the Southern Cross.
Or cocks crowing before you fell asleep
Long rolling nights in a village
Where almost no one spoke your language.
Perhaps you were a prisoner of love
As I was years ago.
Non-protesting, dizzy and dumb for passion.
Would I have stayed for love if I’d known
It was the whole business of love I’d leave behind,
And not just my beloved?
Would you?
The dVerse prompt is ‘Where Does Love Go?”

I love the question hanging at the end…as it speaks to everyone who has had their hearts broken before. Well crafted, and personaly conveyed! Great poem!
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Nicd one, Judy
Thanks for dropping by my blog
much love
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“It is better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all.” 👌
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Oh this story that keeps telling itself. How love leaves us.
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the business of love sounds interesting. i take it to mean that love is beyond the beloved, which we like to pin it on
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Right. So many seem to have forgotten that love is a way of life…not just a feeling between two people. Would that more of our leaders realized this, but thankfully, more of our population seems to be demonstrating it.Hope this is true at election time.
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I enjoyed your African love story, Judy: the conversational tone in the short lines and direct address, which drew me into the story itself, being in a ‘torn love story with a sad ending with me as its only living remnant’ – love that metaphor! And love didn’t leave; it was left behind.
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A very poignant poem Judy. Sadness at losing the love
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You got the message, Kim.
Thanks, Sadje.
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You’re welcome dear friend. I remember the story.
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Deeply poignant
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Thanks, Derrick.
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Really a different angle on this and the final line of the business of love being left behind not just the beloved.
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I enjoyed this a lot. It’s never too late, right?
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Correct.
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Love may not survive, but the story does.
Does the bittersweet ending imply that you opted not to love (someone else) ever again?
The final question is a nice invitation for the reader to sit with their own choices too. Excellent Judy 👏
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No, I did meet someone 13 years later and we married.. and I had several love affairs between but none that lasted. Then, when my husband died, it again took me 13 years before I fell in love again. But every love has been so different from the rest. I put off reading my husband’s lifetime collection of journals until a few years ago and he had written in one of them that he thought Andy had been the love of my life, but I wish he had told me this, because in fact he got that idea from poems I’d written before I met my husband and I didn’t, in fact, love him more than my husband. Sad, sad.
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“But every love has been so different from the rest.”
Yes. The love I have for/with my wife may not be as exciting (now) as some of those previous short fiery bursts. This feels better.
That is a difficult situation, when you cannot talk about it with the other person any more.
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Yes.. Wish he’d told me. I would have assured him that good comes from the very worst that happens to us and he was the good that came about after losing Andy.
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I enjoyed the tone of this, and the questions–especially the one left hanging at the end. Poignant.
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Well, well ~~ for me it was Bay of Islands, New Zealand and fellow named Sam. I was the one who had to leave, return to US, Visa ready to expire. Your beautifully crafted poetry resurrected a ton of memories.
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Did you ever correspond to him afterwards?
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Yes, for several months until life in the US took priority.
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yes that happens.
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a great love story that has gone nowhere as it still remains in your memory. And you have photos to prove! I love this. Thanks dearly.
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Neat picture, Judy, which I’m sure still stirs you when you regard it. I’m sorry your lover didn’t make it, and I’m sorry you turned away from love 😦
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But.. if I hadn’t, I would be dead, too. I was nearly killed twice before I finally left, and the second time he took the bullet for me!
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What the !?!? I’m so glad your guardian angel got you out of there.
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There definitely were two guardian angels the second time.. Andy and whatever stopped the bullet in the gun pressed over my ear and fired…It was a miracle. Everyone at his trial testified that I’d been killed and I thought I had, too. They left me lying in the street when they loaded Andy in the Taxi. I was up above my body looking down and wondering if I still had any power over it. Then, zoom I was in my body, sitting up. Everyone had run away so didn’t see it.. but Andy was looking out of the back window of the cab and made them come back for me. Even the man who shot me thought he’d killed me and weeks later, when he was caught, apologized to my friend. She was the one who told him both Andy and I were still alive. Now I’ve told you the end of the story before the rest of the book. They never found the bullet, but at least it wasn’t in me. And the gun wasn’t jammed as he eventually killed two other people with it..Mystery of life. Unbelievable but I can give you names of people who will tell you it is true. Including my sister who was visiting me at the time. What a vacation she had!
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Oh my gosh, Judy! I do believe you because I believe I’ve been saved by them more than once. Thank goodness you and Andy and your sister all made it through that ordeal. Sounds like Andy wasn’t so blessed another time.
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Right.
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Would that make a good prompt for dVerse Poets, Lisa? It would certainly be interesting reading the results, as I’m already curious about what your experiences were.
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Yes, I think it would make a good prompt. Next time I have a poetics hosting I’ll try to remember to make it about guardian angels 🙂
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It is run collaborating with you on this, Lisa..I may use the same story. Although I have another…I’ve put it on my blog before, though, too. Do you remember it? Hard to believe I was kidnapped twice in my life but it is true.. And escaped each time by a miracle.
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Judy, no I haven’t read about you being kidnapped twice. Oh. My. Gosh.
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Lisa, here is a link to a blog I did about the first one: https://judydykstrabrown.com/2014/08/07/naive-in-africa/
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Lisa, here is the link to the poem I wrote about the other kidnapping. Crazy, it is actually given in two blogs but the link to the end of the poem is given at the end of the first. Crazy that i wrote it in rhyme but a hard story to tell and perhaps that kept me going: https://judydykstrabrown.com/2015/08/18/devil-3/
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A love story doesn’t come into its own unless the stakes are high. As they were here. And the questions reverberate through the years once the die is cast.
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They do. Especially if you are a writer!
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