Showing posts with label Injury. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Injury. Show all posts

Friday, August 18, 2023

TOBACCO

 

I never took up the family habit of smoking,
as my grandfathers did, both of them eaten away
by cancer -- or my grandmother Artie,
who spit that bug-colored juice into a milk jug
just off to the side of the open porch,
as discretely as one could manage, not wanting
the world to know that she chewed the stuff.
But when my mother was a girl of five
or six, she reminds me, she was startled and stung
by a wasp, and her blonde, skinny arm began
to balloon, her breathing soon reduced
to a labored wheeze, the blue sky wheeling
and the dark earth pulling its door
open beneath her, she remembers her uncles
running gangly-limbed out to the field
to snatch a few green and fragrant leaves,
dowsing them with well water and wrapping them,
gently, around her red and swollen skin.
"It must have worked," she smiled softly, her eyes
grown distant and wistful in her remembering,
"Because here I am." Did she mean merely
that we make do with the remedy we have on hand,
or that one poison sometimes erases another?
Some lessons, perhaps, are lost on a son
born and raised in the frozen north.
But I can kiss and wrap a wound, I can run
when my daughter is on the cusp of falling, or edges
too close toward the oncoming traffic.
We are both, to our occasional and mutual
wonder, stronger and faster than we could have
imagined only moments before.

Monday, May 8, 2023

SHAVING AT FOURTEEN

 

The tiny wisps of hair sprouting upon
my face, looking more like shadow or smudge
of dirt, seemed so timid and tentative,
so uncertain in their purpose, that
I made the decision to take my brother's
straight razor, lather my face with warm water
and Barbasol, and began what I assumed
would be a clean and simple shave.
I guided the blade as steadily as I could
across a face which suddenly seemed
treacherous, not quite my own, the contours
of cheek bones and chin much sharper
than I had expected, small, unassuming landmines
hiding beneath every pore,
Adam's apple bobbing with each swallow.
One by one, the tiny flowers of blood
began to blossom through that cloud of white,
and I emerged, defeated, my face covered
in bits of tissue, as if flags of surrender.
Later, my brother looked at me and said simply,
"Don't be in such a hurry to shave.
You'll have the rest of your life for that."
It was a gentle way, I suppose, of saying to
slow down, enjoy what was left of childhood.
The world of adulthood would come
soon enough, its own battles and rewards
yet to be named, its map lines gradually
becoming visible, as clear and undeniable as
your face gazing back from the mirror.

Friday, April 7, 2023

LARRY

 

Larry was the name of the man that my mother
married next, somewhere between ECT treatments
and her daily regimen of pills -- tall, gaunt and ruddy-faced,
simian ears that jutted forward like antennas,
or seashells, glowing translucent and red when
pierced by sunlight, tiny veins like a hundred cracks.
He mistook the marriage, I expect, for one
of love, but my mother needed him for
the much more practical task of disciplining my unruly
brother and me, which he did, following her
instructions like any low-level officer.
He was the first to fold me over a kitchen chair
and strike me, hard, then harder, and then hard enough
to dislodge me from the body, until there I was,
amazingly, watching somehow from above,
as though my own protector, keeper of a hidden
passageway deep within myself, previously unknown.
I didn't think that he was a bad man,
merely someone following orders, obedient
to a fault, perplexed, I imagined, as I was, watching,
as though this were but a poorly acted play.
Though I was, secretly, proud to have not cried,
proud to have left the body, without anyone so much
as noticing; and when I came back, having passed
their test, apologizing for my meager sins,
I didn't come back all the way. Not for them,
and not for a long time to come.

Tuesday, August 16, 2022

NOTES AFTER A BLACKOUT


For days -- then weeks -- after the fall,

when those sudden waves of dizziness would
arise with even the smallest of movements,
and turning over in bed meant pulling
the whole lopsided world up beside me
as well, I found myself practicing gassho after
a long and lazy absence -- first in my
mind's eye, then placing my palms together
just above heart level, centering, centering,
denying the duality of left and right,
up and down, false gravity pulling me
in both directions at once. It surprised me,
this seemingly inadvertent reverence, as if I had
been granted a small offering of grace,
the unassuming dignity of walking slowly,
cautiously from one room to the next.
I felt a measure of kindness to the bruised and
swollen face gazing back from the medicine
cabinet mirror -- face that here needed neither
explanation nor apology -- the same face that
had been waiting there for all this time.

Monday, January 3, 2022

THE MISSING FINGER

 

(for Nels Natus, 1896-1959)
In one version, your grandfather walks
purposely through the gently rustling field,
his steps only slightly wider than usual,
jaw clenched, mouth pulled inward,
holding in one upheld hand the finger
which the shears have suddenly removed.
In the barn, the sheep wait, perplexed,
half-kneeling, dark blood not their own
already seeping into damp wood and straw.
In another telling, he angles the gun
as though it were another limb, one eye
closed to the world of dancing summer leaves,
of soft breezes and silent water winding
back upon itself. He is an easy target
for himself, the burnt smell of flesh strangely
familiar, as the war draft notice flutters
on the kitchen linoleum, nearly rising into flight.
No one is left now to remember, or to claim
this as anything other than simple curiosity.
Yet in your mind's eye you can clearly see him,
his worn denim sleeve waving tentatively
to someone in the distance, someone whom
he cannot make out, his face nearly concealed
by a passing cloud of sepia and dust.
But you know it's him by what is missing,
the way the moonlight slashes through
unexpectedly -- once, then again.

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