Grieving the Living
When was goodbye?

I can’t remember the last time
I truly said goodbye.
Or if I ever did—
when would have been the moment?
Was it when I was sixteen,
tossing my pom poms under the stadium lights
or when I was 19, a backward-sliding
reprobate, who absconded while she was
imploding, as she labored to keep us
solvent after enduring her own
abandonment?
Or further back,
when I mistook dysfunction for motherly love?
Was goodbye when she wouldn’t take her
sunglasses off in indoor buildings,
or when she lost all of her teeth too young,
her body already collapsing ?
Was it when I anesthetized myself with drink
instead of remaining—
when she was most profoundly groaning?
Goodbye was when she succumbed.
Consented to her fractured destiny.
If it was valid by fault,
she would welcome the wither.
Resistance had never altered her outcome.
Perhaps goodbye occurred when the
doctor pronounced me malignantly ill,
and she was the only one I couldn’t call.
I should have said goodbye
when a glimmer of her still saw me
as someone with ambition,
not a target.
I didn’t know goodbyes
had been goodbye-ing all along—
a slow simmering dead cow.
Death without the funeral.
Love and grief are the same emotion,
one does not require the absence of a
pulse to endure it.
Now goodbye is everyday,
when I see her
pushing her cart down the street.
About the Creator
Natasha Collazo
Selected Writer in Residency, Champagne France ---2026
The Diary of an emo Latina OUT NOW
https://a.co/d/0jYT7RR
Reader insights
Outstanding
Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!
Top insight
Heartfelt and relatable
The story invoked strong personal emotions




Comments (9)
Ooof Heavy from start to finish, beautifully written. Makes the reader really feel the regret, lingering absence, and longing. A lack of closure and satisfaction, but that elevates the theme. The last line hits so hard :( An uncomfortable read but beautifully written.
Stunning work Natasha... 😢 Hugs 2 you.
So heartbreaking, yet so beautifully written, Natasha. Congratulations on your top story! 🌸
"when I mistook dysfunction for motherly love" this is sadly close to home
I find this heartbreakingly relatable but that’s not why I think it’s a masterpiece. You have a way with words that makes the most grotesque situations seem so enchanting and alluring. Thanks for sharing, Natasha!
Congratulations on TE! I hope this is not a true event of your life - it is so sad and the ending floored me.
Oh and congrats on Top Story. Seems insignificant but wanted to say it anyway.
This is very sad. Powerfully written, but sad. Hugs and love to you. I am glad you worked through this all but sorry you had to.
This is very sad. 😞