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Friday, December 14, 2012


I can feel the sickness
Settling in
I hear it deep in my bones
That creaking, groaning,
Raspy sigh,
The rattle in the back of your throat.
The cough that makes you feel
Like a chain-smoker of years and years
A pack a day, two packs,
Six,
[of cough drops – not cigarettes.]
Your nose is full,
You feel it drip
And run
And drool
Over your face and
Onto your arms
Down your sleeves and into the
Trashcans,
Ferried by little soft blankets,
Rough woolen blankets,
Burlap sacks.
Your joints may ache
Your toes may sneeze with you
You wrap yourself in your sheets –
Just in time to toss them away –
Oh here comes the heat.
Your forehead rages, your brain implodes,
Your fingers are clammy and damp.
And still,
You wait, struggling yet,
For three days,
Four days, five days or more –
[you had better call a doctor.]
Finally, the curtain lifts
The haze of mucus is gone.
You can
[at least]
See clearly now,
Though your throat is inclined to disagree.
You sound like a bullfrog,
Then even it disappears,
It swallows itself down into your gut.
Leaving you with naught but a whisper,
A squeak,
A mere feeble sound to express yourself with.
At last, five months later
[or more]
It’s totally gone, finally gone,
Life is a picnic again.
And just in time