Authors

  1. Murphy, Theresa D. MA, BSN, RN

Article Content

How had I come to be here-Elizabeth Bishop

 

I choose a corner seat where I can see

 

the Bunker Hill Monument, a solitary pike

 

rising skyward. Remind myself to feel

 

lucky. As my mother taught me,

 

I'm wearing my best underwear, hands

 

folded in my lap like a supplicant, alert

 

for the sound of my own name being called.

 

A woman all in yellow is led through

 

the double doors, her straw bag stitched

 

with pink flamingoes. Then it's my turn.

 

They put me in stirrups, paint my insides

 

with iodine. I say, It's okay, you're not

 

hurting me. A couple of snips and it's over,

 

pieces of me float in a jar. Just some silly

 

cells gone wild, something to be managed,

 

like my ex-husband or the sumac that keeps

 

trying to take over the lawn.