"Traditions Unkept"
In the clash of cicadas at dusk
we once gathered on the back verandah—
barbie coals glowing, an old Holden
parked beneath the gum,
an esky brimming with lemon barley
and Mum’s Vegemite toast
at three in the arvo.
Our ritual: weak tea in chipped china,
shared slices from the tin on the sill,
then a slow wander to Murno’s corner shop
for a couple of lollies before the sun finally dipped.
Now the barbie stands silent,
the Holden gone and gathering dust,
the esky empty of clink and chatter,
and Murno’s windows boarded tight.
I feel the gap in those weathered boards,
the hollow where laughter used to land,
time stilling itself for toast and tea—
a gentle pause I let slip through my fingers.
.
In sunburnt suburbs,
In sunburnt suburbs, evenings once drew us onto the back verandah—
As life sped up, those moments slipped away, leaving quiet spaces
where laughter and ritual once lived.
I’ve captured that gentle fading in verse—
What family tradition have you quietly let slip,
and how does its absence still resonate for you?
here is poetry that doesn't always conform
galateus, arkayye, arqios,arquious, crypticbard, excalibard, wordweaver