The data is grim. There are 35 million people worldwide – a 10% increase over 2005 – living with Alzheimer's disease. According to a 2009 report , the number of people with Alzheimer's is expected to nearly double every 20 years, to 65.7 million in 2030 and 115.4 million in 2050.
In the shadow of these numbers, I am honored to be included in Beyond Forgetting, a book of poetry and prose dedicated to people who have lived — and died — with Alzheimer's (Read the New York Times review here).
It is a powerful book, a weave of voices from husbands, wives, sons, daughters and grandchildren — each touched by this disease.
I'm honored to have "Erosion," a poem about my grandfather included in the book. My grandparents Bart and Lu (Lucinda or Lucy) Myron were wheat farmers in Washington's Spokane Valley. After 40 years of farming, they retired and spent winters in the Arizona desert. In their last years, they lived with my parents. Bart lived to nearly 95 (just a few months shy) and Lu lived to 97.
Erosion
Who knows how
the mind files memory?
Missing pieces, your
history, this life, lies
three states to the south —
lost rusted cars, bindweed
decay in the sun
wild geese fight winds
that rattle shingles, shake doors
your vacant eyes sort
through weeds, neglect
memory somersaults
lands against antelope
bones blanched in desert heat —
futile to search for data:
the face of a son, the hand of the wife
price of wheat, words,
any words to rise, rescue us
from this wait,
this long silent loss.
- Drew Myron
• • •

How many people does it take to make a poem?
I’ve been re-reading Pablo Neruda’s
Book of Questions, a volume of playfully sophisticated couplet queries, and I’m finding my own thoughts now nuanced with rumination.
This latest examination stems from the arrival of The MacGuffin (Spring/Summer 2009), a handsome literary journal from Schoolcraft College in Michigan. My poem Lucy Loses a Limb appears in this issue, and I am giddy as an actress thanking the Academy.
A few months ago, while doing a radio interview promoting Seashore Family Literacy’s Young Writers program, the host asked about poetic influences. This is not a trick question. Still, my head swirled with possibilities, my voice cracked and I could render just a few of my favorites, delivered in a thin voice bereft of the appreciation I carry for writers who weave words and feeling into a handful of carefully crafted lines.
How many people does it take to make a poem?
My Lucy poem — written in the voice of my 95 year-old grandmother — is just 16 lines but the thread of influence is deep and wide. A poem is born long before the first word arrives. If we’re lucky, the piece takes shape from the beautiful mash of people and places, wounds and worries, and the books and writers that help form our voice and view. Once on the page, we are lucky if our words are questioned, honed and revised by numerous hearts, minds and eyes.
No poem — or story, or painting — is born in isolation. All life is influence, gratefully.
Lucy Loses a Limb
After 75 years
I didn’t bury a husband.
I lost a limb.
Each day a swift new cut:
the upper arm, the elbow, every finger
and then the thumb.
There is paralysis where
ache meets absence.
At night, when I turn to talk across
the dark, my voice is heavy as hay bales,
thick with the grit of memory.
I feel the throb of
phantom fingers,
erased one
by one.
- Drew Myron