Friday, January 07, 2011

On Viewing Family Photos After Christmas Dinner

My aunt's yellowing fingernail traces
her nervous smile, and this is when
I'm wondering whether I'll live
to see next year.
Trust her to drop
this into casual conversation––
the growing fetus, her desperate
youth––then leave the moment
to hang like a dislocated limb.
In sixth grade gym, Tony Bower's arm
twisted, vine-like away from his body.
We were told not to look, though
all of us did as the teacher rested
a foot on his chest, told Tony,
told us all, he would count to three.
He pulled on two. Her son walks in,
and though he tells her, tells us,
don't be melodramatic, I hear
a limb being steadied, grasped,
wrenched back into place.

7 comments:

flaubert said...

Poignant piece Nathan. Quite visual.
Pamela

Anonymous said...

Really like the "grin like a dislocated shoulder." Wow.

Laurie Kolp said...

Amazing where our mind can take us. Very impressive, Nathan!

gautami tripathy said...

I had a dislocated elbow. When the doctor set it right, it was painful. Despite the local anasthesia.

As Pamela says, very visual.

I write notes here...

mareymercy said...

I love you weave these two memories/experiences together. Seamless and interesting.

Tumblewords: said...

Intriguing view!

Anonymous said...

age and memories in constant motion alive and well long after death.. like it, yeah, like it a lot....