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I wrote this poem in return for one my grandma wrote when I had my adenoids removed |
Lately I recalled that poem you wrote for me and my dear old “addies”. That hand-written letter, uncatalogued but safely folded and placed in some unmarked shoebox with other worthy treasures to be rediscovered and reread, reloved years after a ten year old’s fear of surgery is forgotten. Lately I’ve been thinking about the hand that wrote that poem and many others. A life abridged but rich in detail, revealed to one who never knew; or perhaps I never asked (grandmas and teachers aren’t real people afterall). That hand that slipped a ring on my grandfather’s finger and gripped his hand to follow, and to guide, I’m sure. That hand that whacked that brat, my Dad, around the ear or held him close. That hand that rationed out mints and barley sugars which clinked against my teeth as you prepared your insulin injection. That right hand of yours told me who you are and perhaps who I could be. Poetry, like diabetes, is genetic. That hand, when last we spoke, was strapped against your body fractured and silent. When last we spoke you, confined to bed, were quick to voice frustration but quicker still to laugh. When last we spoke, that hand quietly healing quiet but pensive. That hand with more still to say and me keen to listen |