Not once—not when I toppled, rigid, a 5'7" pine felled, stiff as a board, a five and a half foot plank, 16 x 32, and not while I wallowed on the rug among his oxygen tubes and my cane and his 8 wheelchair wheels, and not when I sat by his hospice bed, chirping I’m fine!, and not the next day, when the brilliant violet and black slash-slathered in my easy-life skin, or days later when the purple turned yellow and the blue green—never once when I said No pain, Nothing broken, did I feel lucky, did I measure the force of the blow, the floor speeding up like a heavy-weight’s smash to my cheek and eyebrow, not until today, did I begin to feel grateful for my good fortune—no concussion, no fracture—as if I expected to be able to be struck by the earth, a wrecking ball, and not feel it— as when someone on the other side of the world, or the city, is struck in my name, I do not feel it. |
No comments:
Post a Comment