by Madeleine French
Once the miniscule
shiny staples come out,
red blood cells and
collagen are already there,
tiny bricklayers
who repair the damage.
My absurd assumption
that my shoulder
would be what it
used to be, and
my comprehensive catalog
of every single person
who should have
endured this
somehow turned my incision
into a burning magenta line
of resentment.
And now I’m finding it
curiously easy
to live with that.
Madeleine French lives in Florida and Virginia with her husband. A Best of the Net nominee, her work appears in Identity Theory, The Madrigal Press, Dust Poetry Magazine, West Trade Review, Schuylkill Valley Journal, Door Is A Jar, San Antonio Review, Thimble Literary Magazine, and elsewhere. She is working on a full-length poetry collection.
Nicely done reflection on how we sometimes actually feel when put to the test of a medical procedure.