Poetry |

“The ‘Gfit'”

The ‘Gfit’

for Jennifer L. Knox

 

Those mornings, early in the pandemic,

when I was still a stranger to muting myself

and did not yet have a dog, did not yet

not mind picking up poop, which I thought

I’d mind but don’t, but then, when I knew nothing

of what I would know, or what I now think I know,

though now it’s probably mid-pandemic, even if

I’d like to believe it’s the end of the pandemic,

but then it was early in the pandemic,

even though I thought maybe it was getting

towards the end of the pandemic,

and I didn’t have cancer, or if I did,

I didn’t know I had cancer, and I knew

fewer dead people, and had received far

fewer flowers, fewer gifts, and my children still felt

like something I could manage, or not manage,

but simply delight in, and so, oblivious, I’d walk along

the dock by the boats, hoping for a boat

with a perfect name. It’s not that I was a stranger

to myself. I’d stand naked sometimes. Unanchored,

sure, but not actually disappearing. When I turned 40,

my mother sent me a birthday card which read,

Welcome to invisibility. None of the boats

had perfect names. They were called Midas,

or Improbable. One was Last Light, which seemed

close to perfect, but I sort of wanted it

to be called First Light, tho that sounded like

a church song or a midwestern breakfast chain.

After the surgery, when my nipple fell off

in the shower, it washed down the drain.

Jen had written, wanted to send me something.

This was December. Oh shit, I wrote back,

one of my nipples just fell off. LOL. I had always

sort of taken my nipples as birthright,

had fed my children with them. Now, though, I wish

I’d done a wet t-shirt contest in Cancun.

Maybe there’s still time! I’ll get on my boat —

post-pandemic, post-treatment, post-haste, post-hope —

and wave at everyone on the shore. I’ll leave

everything behind. You’ll have to take out

binoculars to see my nipples are gone and to read,

in deep blue cursive, the misspelled name of my getaway boat.

Contributor
Nicole Callihan

Nicole Callihan writes poems and stories. Her books include This Strange Garment (Terrapin, 2023), as well as, SuperLoopThe Deeply Flawed Human, and ELSEWHERE (with Zoë Ryder White). Her work has appeared in Kenyon Review, Colorado Review, Conduit, The American Poetry Review, and as a Poem-a-Day selection from the Academy of American Poets. She lives in New York City.

Posted in Poetry

One comment on ““The ‘Gfit'”

  1. Such beautiful cadence – so many surprises – amazing poem – thank you, Nicole!

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