From Less Fortunate Pirates – “Spared”
Posted in response to “Thunder” by Gabrielle Bryden (and in her honor), this piece is part of my forthcoming book, Less Fortunate Pirates: Poems from the First Year Without My Father. In it, I imagine an alternative to the sudden death thrust upon my family – and ruminate on the things of which we were spared.
SPARED
Another one, yesterday. Another sympathetic doctor,
another nurse in tears despite her hardened arteries.
Thus it begins: the planning of a death at some unknown point,
weeks or months or years from now; the slow snuffing out
of life; the pragmatic brother with the carpool spreadsheet,
colored cells, who will take dad to chemotherapy; altered cells;
who will police the family meals and remove all talk of disease;
who will scrub his clothes to rid them of the stains
of hospital waiting rooms and fevered incontinence.
Another one: pancreas. Another one: liver. Who will
be the first to think of medical bills in the unmentionable
context of our dwindling inheritance; who will be strong
enough to see frailty. Another one: lung. Another one:
blood. Who will spend lunch hours hunched over keyboards
reading words like terminal and metastasized and radiation
and the size of a walnut. Who will rationalize the slow burn,
be thankful of goodbyes, be grateful of the order
of finality known long in advance.
© Bryan Borland