tears (tears)

with a flushed face and
remnants of tears, she
insists on putting her sandals on herself.

i clutch her in my arms,
guiding my hands over hers
to ensure they get put on the right feet.

it is the least i can do to calm my nerves,
the doctor’s receptionist’s voice
(calm as daylight): “She needs to go to the ER.”

i drive fast but he is already calling
(one mile out) “Maybe the fever will go down.”
he reads the Internet article.

i ponder what we would ever do without it
simultaneously cursing the web for making
me question my decision.

cursing myself for not charging my phone,
i call my office number one, two, three times.
no one answers. i will be alone with her.

and i cannot allow myself to cry this time
because Bruce won’t be there to wipe
the tears from my cheeks.

i use his phone to call my sister,
my medical expert, the scientist,
the cancer survivor, the new mother.

she knows more than me, and
before we even hang up, i have unbuckled
her, am carrying her to triage.

i think how at our doctor’s office
we almost never wait (how interminably
long they make us wait here, the tears flowing).

i stay strong and hold her hands as the nurse
squeezes in the last bit of Tylenol, as the doctor
swabs her throat, as she shakes and screams.

later (a phone call home, an antibiotics debate)
the doctor returns with a giant purple popsicle
and she is all smiles (we have survived).

we walk out, both of us, her tugging at her wrist,
and with the tone of a much-older-than-three-year-old,
“I need this bracelet off now.”

she tears at it on the ride home,
anxious to shred all evidence of this horrid affair,
the tears (hers and mine) released now with relief.

Ode to Hospital

Version One

It’s not about the money
it’s about what the money could have bought
the floor that needs replacing
the new kitchen in my bigger house
the prevalent, closest dream
of taking my kids to Disney

and I’m so stupid in having
already told them
already filled their minds with
images of Cinderella castles
and hugging Mickey Mouse

It’s not about the money
it’s about our credibility
our trustworthiness
about the thousands of dollars
we have already footed

only to be knocked on our asses
because they can’t send the bill
to the right place
because no one sent me the right card
because they charged us for something
that we didn’t do

and I see it all in a broken
jar that we will
never be able to fill
and no matter how hard I work
no matter how carefully
I pinch my pennies,

for reasons out of my control
I cannot fill
that cracked glass,
and it’s cutting me,
not the money,
to pieces.

Version Two

I am here now
but not here
somewhere else
lies my mind
not in the pounding skull
not in my aching heart
but elsewhere

wish I could find
the place that
is sticky sweet with warmth
the windless sunny day
that smiles on my dreams

but I sit with my rump
hardened
the pain shooting through my veins
a deer in headlights
words escaping out the door
to chase the thoughts that
left hours ago

my vacuous smile
sucking the life from within
and all I want,
everything that my soul desires,
is too far away for me to reach.