In medical school I wrote a poem in honor of my cadaver, whom our anatomy professor introduced to us as our "first patient." I found the poem in a box in the basement during last week's excavations. It's strange to have this artifact now, after so much has happened - a window into what I was thinking at the very beginning of this journey in medicine.
I wrote it in voices, but that wasn't my idea; I was inspired by Paul Fleischman's book Joyful Noise: Poems for Two Voices, which won the Newbery Medal in 1989.
The voices in the poem alternate for the most part but occasionally speak simultaneously, indicated by lines occurring on the same line or in the center. It's hard to read, and it's not great poetry, but the thoughts are genuine. It had no title when I first wrote it. (P.S. The photo above is indeed of the anatomy lab at my alma mater, New York Medical College...but it was just getting built when I was a student there! I do envy the lucky folks that got to take their anatomy course in that beautiful lab instead of the old one...)
Learning Anatomy
(The Student)............................................(The Body)
Between you and me
my fears and my hopes
Between you and me
my heart in your hands
I am young
I am old
I am living
I have lived
The distance is wide
Between you and me.
How does one person
come to understand
another?
You have touched every scar,
traced the stories they tell
on my body, but my spirit
you have not read
A jumble of words.........................................I have become
a specimen, a chore....................................a jumble of words
an interesting case........................................a body, a case
A jumble of words
A mumbling of rituals
pacemaker.......................................................heart failure
mastectomy...................................................hysterectomy
hysterectomy.....................................................metastasis
metastasis......................................................nephrectomy
nephrectomy.....................................................pacemaker
heart failure.....................................................mastectomy
My hands have trembled
holding the silence of your heart
These hands
They have wiped
the tears I have wept
Want to heal so many hurts
Come together in prayer
These hands
They have clasped a dear one close
Been a part of good laughter
Been a part of much hurt
yet made wonderful things
Like music, and bread
They have cleansed and rebuilt
Made the ordinary extraordinary
I have nourished and created
I have suffered
I have hoped
How little we understand
How little you have probed
How wide is the distance
between you and me?
Only as wide
as your gentleness
I have never been as open as you
This is the most intimate time of my life
My death
To whom can I tell my stories?.......To whom will you tell my stories?
Your gaze is sharp
Sharper than a surgeon's blade
my imaginings about your life
Have you ever nursed a child?
Have you ever loved another?
Have you known loneliness and joy?
Have I really looked inside?.......Have you really looked inside me?
When you dance in a roomful of happy friends
Watch the first snow fall
Hold an infant
Kiss an elder
Think of me.
Has anyone given you such a gift?
Have I ever given a gift such as this?
I will not forget................................................Do not forget
This intimacy
This fractured life
full of possibility
You are so full of wonder
I wonder sometimes
Sometimes you laugh
when you'd rather weep
the folly of youth
I long to be healed
We are "wounded surgeons," all;
with bleeding hands we ply our arts
and try to tie the frazzled ends
Of mysteries and fragile lives.
We huddle close
You stretch far across
and now
your gaze is sharper
you see
Despite my wounds
Despite my many wounds
and the worlds I have lost
Despite all we have taken
away from you
we are yet not so powerful,
not so wise
I am still a woman
I am still one to be reckoned with
We think we have power
You think you know me
But you know the truth
We
are more helpless
and vulnerable
than you
Despite all we have taken
You could not take my soul
You have given so much
You have crossed the valley
of a shadow we don't know
But I fear no evil
for it is you there beside me
Though the distance is wide
Between you and me
a heaven, an eternity
You will stay with me always
I will remember .....................................You will remember
to speak softly
to touch gently
to walk in kindness
Never forget
You are precious, beyond price
Comfort me, then
for my dreams lie with you
my heart in your hands
My self in your hands
between you and me
The distance is wide
But we have held hands across it.
c. 1999
Wow.
ReplyDeleteAn amazing poem - thank you so much for sharing.
Very nice, T. And we don't forget.
ReplyDeleteThat was really something. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteA really remarkable premise for a poem.
ReplyDeleteThank you all for taking the time to read it.
ReplyDeleteMichael - perhaps, but oh-so-pedestrian in its execution; too many rhythmic hiccups; to many moments tinged with sentimentality; should be about a third as long...
Hard to have been a former English major, an admirer of the REAL folks, and be faced with my own paltry efforts from a dreamier youth...
Thank you for sharing....
ReplyDeleteOur cadaver funeral is this coming Friday and this was inspirational to read...thank you
seriously, that is one of the best poems i've ever read. you're a really talented writer. : )
ReplyDeleteThank you for your kind words!
ReplyDeleteExtremely intense. I am tremendously moved by your respect for life, death and science and your ability to find the art in all three. Your respect for each is admirable.
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed your poem. My medical school is having our Donor Memorial Service on Monday and wanted to see if we could your poem or the idea of the poem at the event. My e-mail is davenpk@evms,edu. Let me know and thanks!
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed your poem. My school is having our cadaver memorial in two weeks, and I wanted to know if I could have two students read it. I'd like to give you credit as well in the program if you agree to it. Please email me at DLeech3@gmail.com. Thank-you for sharing this!
ReplyDeleteAmazing poem! I am fascinated by poems written from the perspective of the cadaver-- I have devoted my life's work to helping medical student's find their voice. I would like to include this in my dissertation as an example. Please check your inbox for a form allowing me to reprint your poem in my dissertation.
ReplyDeleteThanks,
S. Sethi, MMH
Department of Medical Humanities
Drew University
ssethi@drew.edu
Hi. Like so many others, I was very moved by your poem. I am a first year medical student and would like to read your poem (with a partner) at our remembrance ceremony on Thursday. Please e-mail me at kzimmerman39@gmail.com. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteKristina
Thank you so much for sharing your poem. I am a first year medical student and my friends and I (7 of us) would like to read your poem in honor of our cadaver during our donor memorial ceremony. I have emailed you.
ReplyDeleteThanks,
Jia Loon
This is such a touching poem. It puts into words my feelings better than I could ever do... I also would like to read this at my cadaver ceremony next week ( I am an MS1 at USC).
ReplyDeletePlease email me at jthangat@usc.edu if this is possible.
Thanks for sharing your beautiful writing!
Jenica
Thank you so much for sharing this poem! It was so beautifully written. Like many others, my friend and I would like to recite your poem at our cadaver ceremony in a few weeks and we would love your blessing to share it with our fellow students, faculty, and staff. Please let me know via e-mail at jaclyn8910@Hotmail.com
ReplyDeleteThank you again!
Jaclyn