11 January 2010
Peter
09 January 2010
Proposal
I will write all Christmas letters, thank-you notes,
and pick out birthday presents for our parents,
if you iron your own shirts, my skirts
(or at least take them to the cleaners)
and unscrew the lids from jars I can't manage.
Feel free to make more money
and have a hobby suitably removed
from the day to day to day pattern of our life.
I, naturally, will bear the children
and pray they come by your good sense,
my ear for languages, honestly.
Like my mother, I will want to paint
often and buy shoes, a new dress for a party.
Unlike her, I am willing to drive in the
city, at night, and through the dust and nothing
of Texas (when we move to be near your
aging parents). My driving might
make you nervous but it's a standing offer.
I'm willing to cook, but if you'd rather, standing in
front of a sink filled with warm soapy water
suits me, too. Please remind me that clouds
are a shaky foundation, of the danger of
drowning in a pool of my own whimsy. Because
I love you I will remind you to be kind
even when you are tired, to suffer fools gladly.
07 January 2010
answer & some sentences
02 January 2010
absit iniuria verbis
Now, I can walk into a hospital room, right into the very heart of it, up to the rawest parts of people and their problems and do something. Even when it's only adjusting a machine or changing a bandage (which it often is, in these early days), the situation changes and it's usually for the better, if only marginally. I walk in and wash my hands. And then I put them to work.
I have high hopes for this last semester of nursing school. There is still so much too learn about the human body, about the ways to manage illness and tend the sick, how to size up both small and gaping needs and then meet them. Tonight, though, I hang up the phone and then sit still for a long while. My friend -- my lovely, kind, funny friend -- is in terrible pain. And there is nothing for me to do, no words to speak that might make it better.
how to string the words together
and then match them up
with your own roiled thoughts
if too much time has passed, sorry
sticks in your throat, or the nervous
syllables shrink and retreat
back down to the safety of your belly
sometimes it's best, the only
way really, to go with that
tried and true old standby
hello