Anorexia

 

–at 16

 

 

There was a doctor who asked if my latch key string 

was a fetish. (I’d lost that key, falling, so suicidal 

I was a bird.) 98 pounds, hips like ears, 

maybe you know the story–

in hospital, a Russian man wept in bed, 

having no English, one night, showed me his scars. 

I saw hunger was Judas‘ silver–so clean

and short-lived. Starting to read: 

Mid-Autumn full moon, the luminous night

Is like a boundless ocean. A wild

Wind blows down the empty birds’ nests

And makes a sound like the waves of the sea

In the branches of the lonely trees.

Rexroth, old Chinese, a deathless root system

of poems–soft tyrannies of song–I was empty already

of everything else.  


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Author: stevekuusisto

Poet, Essayist, Blogger, Journalist, Memoirist, Disability Rights Advocate, Public Speaker, Professor, Syracuse University

0 thoughts on “Anorexia”

  1. Me too, Steve. Simply didn’t want to grow up, and the only thing I could control in my life was what I put in my mouth. Sometimes.

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