We’re together in the kitchen when you say
you talked to your new doctor,
the one who ordered up an EKG
because he said he’d heard a skip, a stutter.
Most likely it’s within a normal range.
What’s normal in our undercover pumps?
Part mystery fist, blossom, cage?
Once I saw a tattooed heart clumped
on a woman’s bare back: not a valentine
but a thick muscle in full spurt,
aortic wad inked in red and blue lines.
She said she loved our corporeal hearts,
the beauty in anatomy. Anyway,
you tell me, my doctor scanned the blips
and says I’m fine. Let’s look, I say.
So you hoist your shirt up from your hips,
I place a palm curved to fit
among your soft gray curling furze,
spider fingers scrying for a tidal beat.
Why had I never sensed a miss
when I so love to lie with you,
nest my palm to feel the thump there?
I touch it now, rueful with what I know:
ways I thought I could protect, repair—
mistaken. But a new grasp of lubadub:
all unnoticed, our deep rhythms change,
and in what we claim as Hub of Love
imperfect is our normal range.
7 thoughts on “EKG”
This poem is so beautiful! It feels so real to me, and immediately made me think of the one I love in this way.
“not a valentine
but a thick muscle in full spurt,”
What a great poem!
I love this poem!
Wonderful combination of form and content. There are times when traditional prosody conveys the experience so well. It makes this such a moving poem.
Gorgeous.
For some odd reason, this poem reminded me of a quote I used when I taught physical diagnosis to med students:
Stopped.
– Joseph Henry Green, M.D. (last word, while taking his pulse) (1791-1863)
What a perfect poem. Thank you.