Task
There’s a poem I tried to write about
bathing you the last day you were alive.
On one of our drives home:
I want to die without shame.
You didn’t elaborate.
I described standing across from a stranger
paid to do this work, her presence
anchoring me in the task
with you between us.
From this distance I can use the word task.
Your pain the astrologer said A gift
for others
A mixing bowl
filled with warm water
we dipped washcloths into before
wringing them out
rested between your legs.
The phrase utilitarian tenderness served
some containing purpose
I needed at the time.
A great effort
to come up to the surface of yourself
to say what you said to us.
A student writes two lines
about an aging parent
they think are boring and may cut.
That poem did not belong
to language, and surpassed touch
Dough rising somewhere
under a red and white
dishtowel in that bowl
Copyright © 2025 by Ari Banias. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on August 27, 2025, by the Academy of American Poets.
“The task is attempting to write the poem again the task is bathing the dying the task is work done for wages the task is recognizing the encounter that refuses containment that insists on experience outside narrative time the task is to not entomb memory in language to not reduce grief to a quotable thing the task is to feel the edge of a void and keep going inside the feeling the task summons in you the task continues despite”
—Ari Banias