USER’S GUIDE TO PHYSICAL DEBILITATION
Should the painful condition of irreversible paralysis
last longer than forever or at least until
your death by bowling ball or illegal lawn dart
or the culture of death, which really has it out
for whoever has seen better days
but still enjoys bruising marathons of bird watching,
you, or your beleaguered caregiver
stirring dark witch’s brews of resentment
inside what had been her happy life,
should turn to page seven where you can learn,
assuming higher cognitive functions
were not pureed by your selfish misfortune,
how to leave the house for the first time in two years.
An important first step,
with apologies for the thoughtlessly thoughtless metaphor.
When not an outright impossibility
or form of neurological science fiction,
sexual congress will be probably one of three things:
an act of sadistic charity performed
by tourists in the kingdom of your tragedy;
the curious, for whom you will be beguilingly blank canvas;
or someone blindly feeling their way
through an extended power outage
caused by summer storms you once thought romantic.
Page twelve instructs you how best
to be inspiring to Magnus next door
as he throws old Volkswagens into orbit
above Calgary. And to Betty
in her dark charm confiding a misery,
whatever it is, that to her seems equivalent with yours.
The curl of her hair her finger knows
better and beyond what you will,
even in the hypothesis of heaven
when you sleep. This guide is intended
to prepare you for falling down
and imagining détente with gravity,
else you reach the inevitable end
of scaring small children by your presence alone.
Someone once said of crushing
helplessness: it is a good idea to avoid that.
We agree with that wisdom
but gleaming motorcycles are hard
to turn down or safely stop
at speeds which melt aluminum. Of special note,
are sections regarding faith
healing, self loathing, abstract hobbies
like pretend spelunking and extreme atrophy,
and what to say to loved ones
who can’t stop shrieking
at Christmas dinner. New to this edition
is an index of important terms
such as catheter, pain, blackout,
pathological deltoid obsession, escort service,
magnetic resonance imaging,
loss of friends due to superstitious fear,
and, of course, amputation
above the knee due to pernicious gangrene.
It is our hope that this guide
will be a valuable resource
during this long stretch of boredom and dread
and that it may be of some help,
however small, to cope with your new life
and the gradual, bittersweet loss
of every God damned thing you ever loved.
Monday, June 11, 2007
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2 comments:
Nice work here, Paul. Some great, great lines. Has that combination of humorous whimsy and advertising/business language I think really works.
This voice is different for you. Another beauty but with a grave and commandful tone. I like it very much.
You ARE sending it out, right?
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