
“the x-ray was an accidental discovery …” Courtesy of Michael Dorausch/flickr.
[Excerpt from The Grief Contest.]
Bone shade: the hip and pelvis
against dusk,
my arthritic spine, the blurring
lines between skeletal structures,
the invisible ray passes
through my soft tissue
the x-ray was an accidental discovery
the first film, a woman’s left hand,
her wedding ring, thick proof
of wedlock (to the scientist)
next, a kidney stone, then
a penny stuck in a child’s throat;
we seek what does not belong
in the body, the murky blot—
a surety to mark our inexplicable pain
if I read the gospel
according to Luke,
I’d know that ghosts don’t have
flesh and bones
nor should I meet with
mediums or necromancers
for answers to the future or
answers to the past—
the dead are probably unreliable narrators
*
a fractured hip is often catastrophic
for the elderly, surprisingly,
more so for men than women,
memories, too, fracture, disassemble
under the weight of a long life,
as one day, my father’s bones will turn
to grit and ash in the crematorium