On Being Told I Look Young
I am aging from the inside
out, I replied. Look in and
you will see my heart sifting
dust like an hour glass, dust
swirling like scraps in windy
corners, large organs drying like
buffalo chips, my stomach an
ashy fireplace, the healthy pink
we loved turned gray, as in
the nightmare where the door
of the microwave oven was left
open and some Betty Furness had
her insides cooked (well done) on
camera. At times debris works
its way to the surface—a
bit in my scalp or navel,
some grit in the cracks in
my forehead, some unexplained
dirt under my nails, and
a dry musty smell
of long unopened books.
The thing is: I wrote this poem when I was in my 20s. Now, in my 80s (early 80s), it’s not so amusing. Prophetic, perhaps.
While on the subject of my internal plumbing, here’s another poem I wrote years ago:
Twist
The doctor studies the slope
of my electrocardiogram
and announces that my heart
twists unusually in my chest.
He can’t tell if this odd
axis is a recent shift,
or whether a twisted heart –
its electricity turned to strange
vectors, impulses staggering
out through my skin askew
—has always been with me.
After being told I’ll die
from something else, not that,
I accept this heart:
Doc
Williams in Paterson said
to let our words visit love
by falling to it aslant.
I’m happy to know I’m equipped
for romance. Another doc said
that when repairing vasectomies he
splices the tubes with oblique
surfaces joined to increase
the size of the passage for sperm.
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