Poetry |

“‘We Have Aaron Hernandez’s Brain'”

“We Have Aaron Hernandez’s Brain”

 

Hearing it said while out for a walk — for relief

from that cramped apartment — approaching

a huddled group on college tour. Then passing

that group and the campus tour guide

who said it so pleased to have strayed off

script, by startling score the deepest impression,

attract the most prospects — students — more,

their parents — to invest — next fall —

in the school’s unique method of helping you both

find your passion and the best way to pursue. “We have

Aaron Hernandez’s brain.” Not a flinch

from the audience in the freezing spring rain

on Commonwealth, in front of the newly donated center

where the brain is guarded. Clear of the scene,

marking that as a thin slice shaved for research,

and evident under microscope the hollowed

summation from continual minor blows like those

delivered by the guide. Thinking You do have

Hernandez’s brain, if this allowed; owned,

yourself distancing from family, friends, life,

love somewhere. Asking Where is your heart?

My own studded star of Football Nation who fell

from grace, committed and absorbed heinous crimes,

all misguided — the present thinking, at least — by CTE —

like Hernandez, sometimes I can’t find my heart.

Alive, though, I might return to huddle up and bark,

“This isn’t an institution one should attend or a future

direction after.” No, just question, “Which college

has the heart?” And say, “If a parent, definitely,

I’d want my child to apply there.” But in saying,

so doing a strident end zone strut. Do what, then?

Prancing up the street, a toy dog, leash in its mouth,

master missing. Done. Though toy lingering in my head,

hearing an announcer say, “Just gaining separation,”

while on TV a split — not tight — end breaking open,

ball already in the air. And then, out of nowhere,

the beaten safety tackling before completion,

the smart thing to do, better than give up that score.

Contributor
Scott Withiam

Scott Withiam’s second book of poetry is Door Out of the Underworld (MadHat Press, spring 2019). His poems have most recently appeared in Diagram, Notre Dame Review, On The Seawall, Plume, Poet Lore, and Indiana Review.

Posted in Poetry

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