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Our Dead Pancreases

Within my father and me, they are

bellwethers of the body’s ruin.

Pancreases turned inside out–

empty pockets

on the day a bill comes due.

Or maybe

my metaphor should be shaped

with more elegance than that

for such a fragile pair as these:

pancreases nudged through life

by the ocean’s shifting hand

coiled into knotted stars

under the broad wand of night.

 

However you choose to imagine them, know

they are dead,

but still needy, even in their caskets,

even under the disarming sweetness of stars.

 

When mine died,

my father knelt beside my hospital bed

saying it was all his fault,

that somehow his broken pancreas

became my inheritance–

a thing passed between father and daughter.

 

Together we sift through

this winter of my pancreas.

How did we miss this?

His eyes fall on my insulin drip.

How did we miss this?

The sting of it

restoring my senses

enough for me to wonder if we aren’t the same inside–

 

if the collapse of a man’s heart

wouldn’t also kill his daughter.

But the summer that the rest of him died

I knelt in the grass,

let his ashes sprinkle

the ground

such hazy grains,

as if he’d never been anything

more than sugar

as if my body had been made right

by the wrong of his.

My pancreas, unknotted

needing nothing more from me

than breath.

 

Only my breath, running deep and wild

my breath, everywhere

untroubled by damage and loss

my breath in its own right–

a confetti of energy

seeding the earth.

 


Allyson Wuerth is a writer and high school English teacher. She has published poetry in The Maine Review, Pine Row Press, Libre, Here: A Poetry Journal, Quarterly WestThe Haiku Shack, Marrow Magazine, Belladonna’s Garden, The Marbled Sigh, and several other literary journals. She has poetry forthcoming in cream city review and Rogue Agent. She lives in Connecticut with her husband, children, and four adorable cats.

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