Mum sat in the twilight of her room, staring ahead, arthritic fingers twisted around themselves, trembling, lips moving but emitting no sound.
‘Hello Mum!’
I tried to be cheerful but there was no response, and I couldn’t read her expression in the gloom, so I switched on the standard lamp that stood next to her armchair.
‘Now I can see you better, Mum. No point sitting in the dark.’
Her expression remained unchanged, hands still in knots, so I bent down to kiss her cheek. She turned to face me, her lips pressed on mine and, as I pulled away to look at her, she smiled as if she remembered my lips.
‘Forget what they have kissed, Mum, as long as they can still smile.’
She looked at me and said clearly, ‘I remember your kisses,’ and retreated into her mind, reclaimed by dementia.
Kim M. Russell, 16th February 2026

It’s Prosery Monday at the dVerse Poets Pub and Mish has given us a line from a Toni Morrison poem to include in our 144-word prose. Mish reminds us that we may break up the line with punctuation and capitalization, add words to the beginning or end, but we cannot insert words within the line.
The line Mish has chosen is from her poem ‘Eve Remembering’: Lips forget what they have kissed.
Such a lovely moment… but still so sad when almost everything is gone… but that single moment of clarity is worth so much
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Thank you, Björn. I was remembering visiting my mum.
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Kim, a very difficult read.
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It was difficult to write, Lisa.
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{{{HUGS}}}
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A very moving piece and I was sure this was about your dear mum. A unique way to incorporate the line as well. Sending you the biggest hug.
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Thank you so much, Mish.
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Loving story
much love
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A tough moment to capture, captured proserrifically.
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