Every Time an Ortho Asks
Today at three with an orthopedic surgeon,
he’ll ask how it happened. Which truth version
shall I reveal—repeatedly beaten with a baseball bat
or my body used for throw-away stunts.
Anxiety envelops me like a pod covers green peas;
I do not wish to explain—I’d rather be in Belize.
Does the ortho need the truth, to what degree?
I don’t want to answer why I didn’t flee.
Why give a complete history—it’s been four decades.
I desire medical care, no masquerades.
My truths buried for years, I am called to spill the dinkum oil,
of knives, guns, and baseball bats make anyone recoil.
Questions and memories race as if they’re in a contest,
remembering when medical care was an impossible quest.
Bruises faded, but battle scars remain wholly unseen.
I cringe at chance noises that should be routine.
Waiting, reliving nightmares from long ago,
silence amplifies a pounding heart, not slow.
I’m still repairing the impairments of brutal years
And tho, I am a vessel of courage—it’s okay for tears.