A HALO OVER THE HOSPITAL

You looked beautiful

Your eyes blue and lucid

Though your face has been reconstructed

by a team of surgeons, just a few little scars

on the bridge of your nose

and under your chin, you’d never know

your skin hung on a rack

and they gave you titanium cheekbones

and a titanium jaw, I couldn’t tell either

until I brushed your teeth

trying hard to dislodge the morning’s oatmeal

while avoiding the broken ones

Some in the front are apparently little stumps

and inside your gums, an astonishing gnarl of metal

Such miniature machinery! You are truly

a cyborg now, the metal of your jaw linking up

with the metal of your cheekbones, behind the scenes

Now your skull is literally shining. And your arms

can move much more than I thought, and your grace

is utterly intact. But your mouth gets so dry,

I have to trace your delicate lips

with a finger laden with balm, cherry balm

from a tube, make sure my hands are clean

then reapply, reapply. And give you water

from a miniature green sponge on a stick,

a little lollipop of water. This is

an incredibly inefficient means of drinking

you observe, and indeed each suck gives you

only a thimbleful. So we have to perform

the feat thousands of times

Try going in through the left side, you advise

and I straddle your bed to do so, trying

to avoid your broken tooth in the front

Just shove it right back in there, you tell me, always

the mentor, always encouraging me

to get it right, to use an adequate angle

and thrust. When you sleep I make sure

you stay breathing, make sure I’m there

when you open your eyes, as you’re slightly stricken

upon remembering the prison

your body has become. I’m frightened, you say

Then I’m sad, so sad to be paralyzed, and I’m sad too

You can’t wipe away your tears because your hands

don’t move, and I can’t wipe them away either

because it’s too abrupt a motion, everything now

needs to happen very slowly. So we place

a wet towel across your eyes and the tears

must soak upwards. More ice, more ice, the water

on the little green sponge has to be cold, not

lukewarm, and your fingertips can’t touch

the sheet, it’s too painful to touch something smooth

OK we’ll try propping your hands up

on rough white towels, is that better, yes

You say my hand feels good touching yours

and it’s like I won the lottery. You fall asleep again

and I hold your hand, but don’t know where

to put my head, so I lay it on your bed beside your hips

and fall asleep too. It’s Sunday afternoon. Outside

in the common room there are people

we once might have pitied but now we envy—

double-knee replacement, one amputated arm, big deal

Later I get to wheel you outside, it takes forever

to lift you into the chair and requires a motorized

yellow crane, your body like a beautiful tan bird

in its beak. I try to wheel you slowly like Nurse Peggy said

Slowly down the glass hallways, careful not to raise

your blood pressure, we can go out into the autumn air

but we can’t go down to the pond, not yet, you say

you want to see the trees with the gold leaves and so

we do, the leaves fallen along the pathway bunch up

in the wheels of the chair and I get a little panicked,

how do you work this thing, where are the brakes?

Everyone at home wants to know if you are OK

You’re not “OK,” you’re paralyzed and in tremendous pain

Everyone keeps asking, Do you think she will walk again?

But that really isn’t the issue, the issue today

is your distended stomach, your painful little balloon of gas

Apparently the spine runs the bowels and the blood

and just about everything else, miraculous and hurt

jelly cord. Your whole body suddenly withered and transparent

We can see your muscles move with the electrodes on

You have some tricep, no bicep, your left quad jerked

but no luck on the right, someday you’ll recover, I just know it

and I tell you so, I can’t stop smoothing your hair, its

blonde laced with gray, growing longer

than it’s ever been, and your body

I always wanted to see naked, now

I’ve seen it twice: once in a photo album

I stumbled upon, photos of you and your lover

naked in your kitchen, you both looked

happy and free, and I felt happy for you

and now here, the aureole of your immobile breast

magnanimous and wide, your legs quiet

and hairy, so not-moving. We discover

some stitches in your calf, someone at the ICU

must have forgotten about them, the nurse pushes on them

and pus comes out, we all wince. They have to come out soon

and so they do. Dinner wheels in, puréed tuna melt, puréed

Black Forest cake, and I imagine this gigantic medieval kitchen

where they make each dish then send it

to an enormous blender and out comes

this ridiculous beige & gray paste. Of course

you’re not hungry, the lemon yogurt I fed you

so assiduously in the morning has caused you

unthinkable pain, and to think I pushed you into

eating all of it, agony. I read you an essay of mine

about troubling the passage from the particular to the universal

and you say yes, Maggie, the problem now is to think

the singular. The singular, you say again, very seriously

as if it’s ten years prior and we’re just sitting in your office

This whole situation is seeming very singular, there’s a book

you want me to read but you can’t remember the title

so we have to call J, I hold the phone up to your ear

Press it harder, you say, OK, it’s called PROVINCIALIZING EUROPE

and I promise to read it, at this point

I’d eat a copy of MEIN KAMPF if you asked me to

I am so sad to be paralyzed

The problem now is to think the singular

The pain is returning and thank God Nurse Winnie

is back on duty, I’m so glad she’s curious and presses you

to be articulate, even when you’re tired and don’t feel like it

She needs more of a description, she doesn’t want

you to get an infection, finally you say Winnie, the pain

in my intestine is coming from my unconscious, a line

that brings me unending happiness. Later I sit on the bed

and tell you a little about my spastic love life, about the person

I am trying not to be in love with

You ask if we went home and fucked, I say we did

and you are happy, and I love the way the word Fuck

comes out of your wired mouth, as if desire can never be

closed down or tortured out, as if Fuck will always bubble out

of a metal forest. I tell you a little more

and you say, Good for fucking, bad for future planning

You say I don’t have to be ashamed of my desire

Not for sex, not for language

You say you’ve learned by age fifty

that you need them both, together, and that you and J

have that. You’ve been so happy. Crying now you say

All I can think is that if we built it once

we can build it again and I know you will and tell you so, then kiss

your forehead, the one part of your body

that hasn’t sustained any damage

Not one single scratch on your helmet

You took the whole fucking fall

on your chin, the snap back of your head

caused the fracture, the space that’s injured

is no bigger than a chocolate bar and yet

here we are. Jelly cord swollen with broken blood

vessels, thousands of nerve cells fighting for life

“Scars form, further distorting any surviving nerve pathways”

“One axon after another turns into a severed stump”

Fuck science, it’s so moralistic, and the terrible sensations mean

you will heal because you can feel, like when the nurse

pushed on your stitches until they oozed and you said Ow

or when the smoothness of the sheet assails your fingertips

or when you say everything, absolutely everything

feels so tired and sore. Every word a chore, and yet

you give me so many, we discuss direct service

vs. community organizing, your care for the world

simply astonishing. You even make your physical therapist

feel beautiful, by expounding on the virtues

of her new haircut. Well my husband really likes it, she says

and you don’t even cringe. You change the subject, tell us

the story of your first dog, whose name was

Shameless Hussy. I am happy to see so many competent people

buzzing around your body, I get angry when they move you

too quickly, I like it when they tend to you

tenderly, your head kind of tacked on by a brace

I hate this thing, you say, but I’m so terrified

to have it come off, because you know you can’t hold

your own head up, it’s like being an infant again

but you have all this rich language. And when

they take it off to stretch your head

your neck finally appears, beautiful and clammy

and bluish, a little like the plucked skin of a bird

You ask me to lift your shoulders off the pillow

then set them back down, I try to get the rolled towel

behind your head with one hand while I redistribute

the gelatin of the pillow with the other, Be a little bolder, you say

What feels right to you keeps changing

Thousands of times I moisten your mouth with balm

and water. At lights out I drive back to your house

where I sleep on the floor of your office, amidst

the hundreds of projects you left in-progress

Piles of books and papers, tracts about

global feminism, calls for social justice

I cry a little then, in mourning for

your graceful and butch handwriting

But I know now where you are, and where you will be

for some time, gold leaves swirling outside

your window, gold leaves making a halo

A halo over the hospital