Orville Holtan- the Shrinking Man by Tim Holtan

A poem written for an aging Orville Holtan just days before his death,  June, 2003, by his son, Tim Holtan

 

Shrinking Man

My Father’s world is changing

Spinning and drifting

What can he do to fill his time?

Those long days with no direction

To wander freely, without a care

Is unthinkable, no longer possible

He loved his cars, what fun to drive

Is it possible to get lost in your own hometown?

Better to sit and read a book

When the outside world is no longer familiar

The body aches and hands so weak

Needing help, getting frail

Gloves barely fit oer gnarled knuckles

Gratitude for a helping hand

A love for people and visiting

Desperately hanging on to reality

A world now smaller, dependence growing

A body failing, a mind betraying

His plea is simple, so very basic

Remember me, visit me

Help me, love me.

A shrinking man, a little man

Whose world shrinks too

So fast, too fast.

Poem written by his youngest son, Tim Holtan