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Benjamin Gorman's Shared Poems

Check's in the mail

A check in today's mail
paper symbol of wealth, wherewithal;
that, in turn, standing in for real things
things used, eaten, touched, seen

Money: distracting fear-born intermediary
O, for payment in the things themselves!
carrots and beans for hours of garden toil
a roof, walls, for house-building labor!

I want direct exchange, closer to the sources,
the meanings of things revealed—
the produce of work with the hands,
breath and muscles' heat made tangible

Barter a thousand flexes of the elbows
and 400 breaths for a bowl of apples
or a sturdy mug and a plate;
how many steps, how many liftings for a chair?

next

through a stultifying daze of cloned hours
I drag my crippled sense of wonder
pull myself forward on one or another
task to be done, the day's highlights
breakfast
facebooking
a quick graphics job
dropping off the recycling
routine becomes distraction
until distraction is routine
and the original purposes
are lost in the shuffle
of feet and
diced by
the blinking
of eyes

Odd job

Another in a series of odd jobs
Standardized Patient
I'm given a name, a history,
a complaint—even a family
dead and alive, generations before and after:
grist for med students' practice

This case is new, in more ways than one:
father, widower, called in to a hospital late at night
my son, Chuck, 17, in a car wreck,
head injury, unconscious, non-responsive
his passenger, Eric, an exchange student we're hosting
mangled legs, punctured lung, lacerations

They were coming home from
a school dance, the SUV swerved, rolled
Eric's bloodwork showed alcohol
but Chuck was driving
they'd asked my permission to operate on Chuck's head
all these facts I'm given, and more

This scenario is to train pediatrician residents
to give bad news:
Chuck did not survive.
They have fifteen minutes.
They "must use the words 'dead' or 'died.'"
The teaching doc starts the camera. Ready? Go.

One after another, all women, the doctors
come into the room where I pace anxiously—
first day, a small conference room, littered with chairs;
next, an intensive care room, eerie,
giant ceiling-mounted armatures like robotic fiddler crabs
dispensing gases, suction, monitors, all dark, one hissing softly in its mechanical sleep

"Chuck died." "Chuck has died." "Chuck is dead."
I do my best to be shocked, disbelieving, confused;
I try to reach through to something inside them
something that is not a test, humanity beyond the exercise—
I am an actor, after all; this is training both ways
"What? He—he what?"

One doctor's voice is so tiny, I'm sure the camera won't pick it up.
Another, direct, businesslike, "I have bad news."
A hint—a degree of remove, an awareness—in the face of another
"I know this is a test," her eyes say.
"My boy! He's my boy!" I wail, making tears
playing a dark game, trying on the worst of fatherhood
from the safety of pretend.

The man whose jacket it was

Twenty years
it has hung in my closets
followed me
faithful dog
through many moves
north, east, west again

Biker's jacket
heavy leather
massive zips at chest and sleeves
snaps that mean business
short-waisted
a belt I never engage

I borrowed it
friend of a friend
costume for a play that never opened
and it just stuck around
patient for me to find
its hidden purpose:

to help me recover
what I never had
but needed
bellows to the spark
peat pot for the seed
of manliness

In all these peripatetic years
I've rarely given thought to the owner
a man I never met
ex-boyfriend, shadow,
his shed husk of manhood
now unequivocally my own

March

Flurries scurry
desperately on a faint breeze
caught between
gravity's certainty
and the assured dissolution
of inhospitable warm ground

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