Poetry |

“Nourish,” “Old Lady Smell” & “January 6, 2022”

Nourish 

 

My mother’s nipple

from where I once fed

pokes through her hospital gown

as though it is one of the snaps.

I’m not sure I should touch

her breast, rearrange her,

as so much of her body hurts

and she’s at last floating

on morphine. Her nipple

once nourished me

but now nothing can nourish her

as she refuses all food.

I’m feeling useless, wanting

to preserve my mother’s

dignity, when a nurse

with a solution so obvious,

so simple, pulls up the bedsheet.

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

Old Lady Smell

 

My mother made me promise

to tell her if she ever started to smell

like an old lady. My fastidious mother —

who dusted every Saturday

who never left a dish in the sink overnight

who loved taking showers

(no matter how dangerous they’d become)

who always lifted the lid of her Tupperware

and sniffed her leftovers before eating

who always ran the kitchen fan when she cooked

who always ran the bathroom fan when she pooped

who put a chicken carcass in the freezer

until the day of trash pickup since she didn’t want

even her garbage to reek — made me pinky swear.

I kept waiting for a human, sour stink

in her house, in the nursing home,

in the hospital, in hospice, on her body

but such a smell never came.

It was as though my mother was a saint,

like Little Rose of Woonsocket —

who died a few months before my mother was born

who performed miracles

who wore the stigmata

who cured the ailments of others

who had crippling arthritis like my mother

who, unlike my mother, died young

whose followers had her grave dug up

to see if she could be canonized by the Catholic Church

whose body hadn’t decomposed

whose coffin emanated the scent of roses.

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

January 6, 2022

 

A year later I remember my mom in the nursing home

without her phone. My niece had taken her new clamshell with 4G

to reboot overnight. We hoped this meant her calls would no longer drop.

My niece wanted to save all her grandmother’s contacts

for the next seven months of her life. There was no way to know

that my mother’s time would be cut that short. I’d bought her

a yearlong plan of unlimited TracFone minutes.  My mother

had survived Covid — so many in her nursing home gone, buried

because of it.  So many, in fact, that they are now raising money

for a Remembrance Garden on the grounds. Of course, Covid

isn’t over. And the insurrection continues. A year ago

it seemed unthinkable — camouflage and Confederate flags,

a guillotine, smashed windows, and grown men pooping

on the capitol floor.  My niece dropped off my mother’s new phone

at reception on January 7, 2021 as there were still no visitors allowed.

By the time I spoke to my mother she had calmed down

but said the whole nursing home was upset, the Alzheimer’s

patients crying and nurses texting their kids. What if those guys

were able to climb up to the fourth floor? My mother’s legs

wobbled, even with a walker. I know, mom, I said, I know.

She asked, What if I had no way to call you to say goodbye?

I should have dialed the nurse’s station January 6. Should have

insisted I needed to speak to my mother no matter how busy

the staff was. We used to joke about my mother’s

burner — the only phone she could dial with her arthritis —

how she was untraceable like the bad guys in The Wire

or Breaking Bad. Today I wonder about the contacts

on each rotten senator’s phone. Each rotten representative

in on the lie. I wonder what they tell their mothers

a year later. That is, if their mothers are still alive.

Contributor
Denise Duhamel

Denise Duhamel’s most recent books of poetry are Second Story (Pittsburgh, 2021) and Scald (2017). Blowout (2013) was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. A recipient of fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts, she is a distinguished university professor in the MFA program at Florida International University in Miami.

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