[wpaudio url=”/audio/7_9/Chelko.mp3″ text=”listen to this poem” dl=”0″]
I feel the eel of her
skim the undersurface
of my skin. It’s
alive. Now, I imagine
everyone I meet emerging,
rumpled and wet, betwixt legs.
The birthing room dank
with the breath
between screams.
Shrill.
We are bonded,
those of us who have, for whatever reason,
cried together. The cords between us
variously thick
and glistening. It’s tough
to be alive. Stuffed as we are
with this stuff.
No dimple of innocence
at the crest of my skull
(but if I open my mouth wide
there is that soft dip
that opens in front of my ear-
so I’m not all armor). The body
entombs itself. My mother
has shrunk an inch and a half in a year-
her bones growing
inexplicably dense, rarified.
Now even she is
hard to the touch. I undressed
my grandmother once
months before, at ninety,
she died. Now you can see how terrible
old people look, she said. Her skin
iridescent: an insect wing in crumpled rest
which could, at any moment,
span the room.