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Archive for the ‘Health’ Category

Interlude With Mary

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

That evening had been arranged pretty carefully

by our basement boarders, Jim and Pheenie,

and they assured me it wouldn’t hurt a bit.

We rehearsed where we’d go, what would

and wouldn’t be said, how Jim would

pick up the tab for any food, beverages,

the tickets, and how, if I had a mind to,

I’d hold Mary’s hand in the backseat

of their car and possibly kiss her goodnight,

if I was so inclined and didn’t mind too much.

It went pretty well according to plan,

except I was shaken by how simply lovely

Jim’s niece turned out to be, and we all knew

she’d be thrilled just to watch stockcars

go round and round a dusty dirt oval.

I could tell she’d have a cheeseburger too,

if I ordered one for myself.

She only ate half of hers, explaining

partially why she was so slender.

I held her cool hand in the car and kissed her

on the front porch of the house where she lived.

Mary said goodnight, smiled and

met me with urgency when I kissed her

a second time, then hurried in the house.

Jim thanked me, which wasn’t necessary.

Pheenie couldn’t find words, which was okay.

I told them I’d enjoyed meeting Mary.

We’d rehearsed everything except

how we’d feel when Mary died a few weeks later.

(Published in the April 2001 issue of Offerings Magazine)

Note:  Leukemia. Maybe the second time I’d heard that ominous word.  I was sixteen when this interlude occurred, getting more serious about school and education – I went to a great high school, Theodore Roosevelt in D.C. – and was turning to new friends, new experiences, new challenges.  Jim and Pheenie had been like surrogate parents, albeit country types and heavy drinkers but salt (or maybe pepper) of the earth.  They’d take me, brother Jim, and sisters GeeGee and Bee with them to the dusty dirt oval Friday nights, then for burgers at a nearby honky-tonk where, I swear, I heard some of the great ones, like Hank Williams, coming up or on the way out.  Though I was in the process of finding classical music and jazz when Jim asked me this favor, there was no way I could possibly say no after all he and Pheenie had given me – us! – over some difficult years.

Posted in Country-western, Health, Human Nature, Love, Nostalgia | No Comments »

Boy, Apple, Twenty-Seven

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

Marilyn, as she introduces herself,

is a neurologist almost my age.

She gazes deep into my eyes,

lo0king for trouble, I guess, though

I haven’t yet told her why I’m here.

It’s this ringing in my ears, I say.

I wonder if I have a tumor in there

somewhere that’s causing it -

at first one violin, now a whole

symphony orchestra full, all 0ff-key.

She still wonders if perhaps I’m sliding

into Alzheimer’s, the basis of her practice,

and asks me to remember the words,

Boy.  Apple.  Twenty-seven.  B-A-T.

So, I commit them to memory.  Done.

Half an hour later, when she returns,

I repeat, Boy.  Apple.  Twenty-seven.

She smiles, completes her exam, and

schedules me for an MRI in a week.

I walk out mumbling:  Boy, apple, twenty-seven.

The MRI goes without a hitch, though

with more than a little bit of discomfort.

And noisy.  All through it, I repeat those

three words:  Boy, apple, twenty-seven,

over and over and over again.

I literally run into Dr. Marilyn several weeks

later in Whole Foods in the produce section.

I smile and say, Boy, apple, twenty-seven.

She tries to smile, searches deep in my eyes,

and says, I don’t recall that we’ve met.

(Published online in the May 2008 issue of Word Riot)

Note:  True story-poem.  I’ve had this ringing (tinnitus) in my ears for nearly fifteen years, thought it was time to see if there may be an obstruction or growth inside somewhere that caused it.  Dr. Marilyn preferred to see if I were going down the rabbit hole into Alzheimer’s.  There was no tumor or growth or evidence of Alzheimer’s, except when I had that chance meeting with her in Whole Foods.  That was the day this old boy decided to buy apples, twenty-seven of them.

Posted in Health, Human Nature, Humor, Science | No Comments »

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