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Beauty Is a Verb

Page 9

by Jennifer Bartlett


  My hip is feeling better right now. I know it’s there, but tonight it is not grinding away at wit and goodwill as it sometimes does, and for that I am grateful. In an interview recently I was asked if artists today have responsibilities to those who come after us. I said something about doing our best work, about setting the bar as high as we can. But what I wish I’d said is what I hope: to keep the knives sharp and the guitar tuned, to leave the door open, not to drink up all the liquor or breathe up all the air. After that...

  Poet of Cripples

  Let me be a poet of cripples,

  of hollow men and boys groping

  to be whole, of girls limping toward

  womanhood and women reaching back,

  all slipping and falling toward the cavern

  we carry within, our hidden void,

  a place for each to become full, whole,

  room of our own, space to grow in ways

  unimaginable to the straight

  and the narrow, the small and similar,

  the poor, normal ones who do not know

  their poverty. Look with care, look deep.

  Know that you are a cripple too.

  I sing for cripples; I sing for you.

  Normal

  Across Oak Park Avenue

  is a city park, lush

  and busy, where men play softball all

  evening, too far away

  to watch, their dim voices

  drifting across the green. Their cars line

  the streets as far

  as I can see. Sammy and I,

  Robert and I, Hoffmann and I call out

  the makes and models

  as the cars pass. Dodge Dart.

  Chevy Nova. We are seldom wrong—Corvair,

  Pontiac GTO—we who drive

  wheelchairs and banana carts—

  Mustang, VW, Rambler American—who have not yet

  rounded second—

  ’57 Chevy! My dad had one of those—

  who watch out windows a world so soft—T-bird—

  so fair—Corvette—

  so normal—Ford Fairlane—

  a world going on, going by, going home.

  Poems with Disabilities

  I’m sorry—this space is reserved

  for poems with disabilities. I know

  it’s one of the best spaces in the book,

  but the Poems with Disabilities Act

  requires us to make all reasonable

  accommodations for poems that aren’t

  normal. There is a nice space just

  a few pages over—in fact (don’t

  tell anyone) I think it’s better

  than this one, I myself prefer it.

  Actually I don’t see any of those

  poems right now myself, but you never know

  when one might show up, so we have to keep

  this space open. You can’t always tell

  just from looking at them either. Sometimes

  they’ll look just like a regular poem

  when they roll in...you’re reading along

  and suddenly everything

  changes, the world tilts

  a little, angle of vision

  jumps, your entrails aren’t

  where you left them. You

  remember your aunt died

  of cancer at just your age

  and maybe yesterday’s twinge means

  something after all. Your sloppy,

  fragile heart beats

  a little faster

  and then you know.

  You just know:

  the poem

  is right

  where it

  belongs.

  From the Surgeons: Drs. Sofield, Louis, Hark,

  Alfini, Millar, Baehr, Bevan-Thomas, Tsatsos,

  Ericson, and Bennan

  6-10-60. History. This child is the second of three

  children—the other two are perfectly normal. He was the product

  of a normal pregnancy and delivery. At birth it was noted

  that the left lower extremity was shorter than the right. The child

  had a fragmentation and rodding of the left femur

  for stimulation of bone growth. Prior to that procedure a 2” discrepancy

  existed. This procedure was repeated in 1957 and again in 1958. Prior

  to the procedure in 1958 a 2” discrepancy was again noted. The child’s

  early development was normal. He has, of course, been periodically set back

  in his physical progress because of the surgical procedures.

  6-10-60. Physical Examination. Head: There is nothing

  abnormal about the head. Left lower extremity: There appears

  to be only a very moderate degree of atrophy in the left thigh, but

  this is explainable on the basis of his surgical procedures.

  Gait is moderately abnormal but caused only

  by the leg length discrepancy.

  7-28-61. History. He began sitting at six months of age, walked

  at one year, and began talking at about one year of age. There have been

  some periods of regression following the early surgical procedures. The boy

  is attending school and is apparently well adjusted.

  7-28-61. Physical Examination. Examination reveals a slight

  compensatory scoliosis. This is corrected by equalization of leg lengths.

  This boy walks with a left short leg limp. He is able to run without difficulty,

  and can hop on his right foot, but he is unable to hop on his left foot.

  When performing the duck waddle his left leg leads the right.

  12-7-62. Neurological Examination. Deep tendon reflexes

  are physiological. There is a slight diminution of the left knee jerk

  as contrasted with that on the right. No sensory loss nor pathologic reflexes.

  8-28-63. Progress Notes. The mother relates that the boy has been

  stumbling more and more in recent weeks. His quadriceps are

  quite weak, probably from the multiple surgical procedures

  done on this thigh. Quadriceps are rather bound down at the knee.

  The leg length discrepancy is 3” and it is very difficult

  to have a satisfactory shoe lift on this dimension. A long leg brace

  was ordered with knee locks and with a 2” pylon extension.

  11-8-63. Progress Notes. This boy has received his long leg brace

  with the caliper extension today. The brace is satisfactory,

  except for the fact that the ankle joint is rigid and

  he has a great deal of difficulty getting his trousers on and off

  and needs to split the seams.

  8-14-64. Progress Notes. This child who is almost 10 years of age

  is wearing a long leg brace with a stilt on it, but the mother says

  that he objects to this and apparently is undergoing considerable

  emotional disturbance. The mother has noticed this since his return

  from the hospital at which time he had a repeat fragmentation and rodding.

  4-7-67. Physical Examination. Lower extremities: Circumference:

  There is obvious atrophy of the left thigh: This cannot

  be accurately compared with the right because of the shortness

  of the extremity and the dislocation of the patella.

  6-6-69. History. The child is in the ninth grade and does fair

  and goes to a regular school.

  10-30-70. Progress Notes. Final Discharge. The patient is essentially

  unchanged since last visit. His leg lengths measured to the heel

  on the right measures 101 and 86 on the left from the anterior superior

  iliac spine. He has occasional episodes of pain. He is still

  wearing the long leg brace with the high lift below

  and there was no indication on the mother’s part that she plans

  on havi
ng anything done in the near future.

  Lost Hyoid

  Two hundred bones in the human body,

  they wait for me to die so they can tell

  their stories uninterrupted—I wait

  for different reasons, surround each bone

  with my ignorance, phalanges, metacarpals,

  spongy hollows in surprising places,

  it’s the joints that give the trouble, the twist,

  the shout, worn away, worn outside

  in, I knew a woman, lovely in her bones,

  I jousted with the emperor of bones,

  he always wins, talus, fibula, tibia,

  calcium and phosphorus are his elements,

  and time weeps for no hand, radius, ulna,

  humerus—insert joke here—the smallest bone

  is the stapes, the stirrup which rides across

  your ear—hear? But the lost hyoid connects—

  roll this over your tongue—to no other bone.

  Kenny Fries

  from STARING BACK:

  THE DISABILITY EXPERIENCE FROM THE INSIDE OUT

  We’ve been shadow spirits lost between our nondisabled (for most of us) upbringing

  and our disability lessons in life.—CAROL GILL, Ph.D.

  Throughout history, people with disabilities have been stared at, defined by the gaze and the needs of the nondisabled world. Many times, those who live with disabilities have been isolated in institutions, experimented upon, exterminated. We who live with disabilities have been silenced by those who did not want to hear what we have to say. We have also been silenced by our own fear, the fear that if we told our stories people would say: “See, it isn’t worth it. You would be better off dead.”

  Over two decades ago, when I first began searching for the words with which to begin speaking about my own experience living with a congenital physical disability, a disability I was born with for no known scientific reason, a disability with no medical name except for the generic “congenital deformities of the lower extremities”—one way of saying I was missing bones in both legs. In the summer of 1989, I took the initial steps of finding the language, unearthing the images, shaping the forms with which I could express an experience I had never read about before, so that my experience as a person with a disability could become meaningful to others.

  What I remember most about that summer is wanting to throw all those drafts away, not thinking them poems. Not having a role model whose steps I could follow, unsure of my own identity as both a writer and a person who lives with a disability, I felt like one of those “shadow spirits” Carol Gill writes about, unable to meld successfully on the page the nondisabled world I lived in with my experience of being disabled in that world.

  I also felt afraid. I felt a fear that Anne Finger was writing about at almost the same time in Past Due: A Story of Disability, Pregnancy, and Birth. In Past Due, Finger recounts her experience at a feminist conference when she talked about her inhumane treatment as a child in the hospital because of complications from polio. After Finger publicly shared her story, a colleague said: “If you had been my child, I would have killed you before I let that happen. I would have killed myself, too.” Finger reacted:

  My heart stops. She is telling me I should not be alive. It is my old fear come true. That if you talk about the pain, people will say, “See it isn’t worth it. You would be better off dead.”

  If this was a friend’s response to Finger’s experience, how would my friends, not to mention those who did not know me, react to what I had to say? And, after knowing what I had gone through, how could they believe there was so much more to living with my disability than pain?

  A lot has happened since I first began to write about my experiences living with a disability. In 1990, the process—which began in 1968 with the Architectural Barriers Act and sections 504 and P.L. 94-162 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973—culminated in the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act, called the most far-reaching civil rights legislation since the Civil Rights Act of 1964. As historian Paul K. Longmore points out, with the ADA’s passage, even as the “quest for civil rights, for equal access and equal opportunity, for inclusion” continues, we have moved on to a second phase, which he defines as “a quest for collective identity” in which “the task is to explore or to create a disability culture”:

  Beyond proclamations of pride, deaf and disabled people have been uncovering or formulating sets of alternative values derived from within the deaf and disabled experience...They declare they prize not self-sufficiency, but self-determination, not independence but interdependence, not functional separateness but personal connection, not physical autonomy but human community.

  As we move away from viewing disability within the confines of the moral and medical models, we are moving toward a social definition of disability. As social scientist Victor Finkelstein so concisely states, whereas in the medical model the “focus of attention is firmly on the physically impaired individual,” now it shifts to where “the focus is the nature of society which disables physically impaired people.”

  That the disability experience is not solely rooted in bodily impairment is evidenced by how the definition of disability changes from society to society. What is considered a disability in some societies, for example club—or flat—feet is not considered a disability in others. And what was considered a disability in our culture years ago would no longer be considered a disability today. Consider poor eyesight before eyeglasses, for example. In a preliterate, agrarian society, visual acuity, the need to read print or traffic signs, was not necessary or could be compensated for.

  Viewed from this perspective, it is clear that it is the barriers, both physical and attitudinal, that need to be changed, not the impairments or the bodies with which we live. I have asked numerous disabled persons what causes them more difficulty, the disability itself or the discriminatory barriers put in their way. The answer is overwhelmingly the latter.

  The experiences of those with disabilities prove that there are countless different ways of moving through the world. But old models die hard. Literature, which reflects the richness of the different ways we conceptualize how we live within the world and the ways the world lives within us, thankfully does not, and should not, conform to the dictates of current political or social discourse.

  What differentiates the oppression and discrimination of the disabled from other traditionally marginalized groups is that in one quick instant—a slip in the bathtub, a virus-borne disease—anyone can join us, the disabled (currently estimated at 54 million in the United States). In fact, at some time in our lives, each and every one of us, sooner or later, will be, whether for short term or long, in some way disabled. Because of this, those of us who live with disabilities are viewed with a fear, though irrational, that is perhaps too easy to understand. (And if there’s one thing those of us who live with disabilities understand, it is change.) Ultimately, those of us who live with disabilities are too often treated as unwelcome reminders of the mortality that is the fate of us all.

  Over the years, I learned that I was not alone in my struggle to give voice to the disability experience, an experience that throughout history has been marginalized or co-opted, if not ignored. It is my hope that my work is just one step in an ongoing effort to bring the lives of those of us who live with disabilities closer to the center, where a truer understanding of the richness of our lives can be forged.

  Excavation

  Tonight, when I take off my shoes:

  three toes on each twisted foot.

  I touch the rough skin. The holes

  where the pins were. The scars.

  If I touch them long enough will I find

  those who never touched me? Or those

  who did? Freak, midget, three-toed

  bastard. Words I’ve always heard.

  Disabled, crippled, deformed. Words

  I was given. But tonight I go back

  farther, want more, te
ar deeper into

  my skin. Peeling it back I reveal

  the bones at birth I wasn’t given—

  the place where no one speaks a word.

  Body Language

  What is a scar if not the memory of a once open wound?

  You press your finger between my toes, slide

  the soap up the side of my leg, until you reach

  the scar with the two holes, where the pins were

  inserted twenty years ago. Leaning back, I

  remember how I pulled the pin from my leg, how

  in a waist-high cast, I dragged myself

  from my room to show my parents what I had done.

  Your hand on my scar brings me back to the tub

  and I want to ask you: What do you feel

  when you touch me there? I want you to ask me:

  What are you feeling now? But we do not speak.

  You drop the soap in the water and I continue

  washing, alone. Do you know my father would

  bathe my feet, as you do, as if it was the most

  natural thing. But up to now, I have allowed

  only two pair of hands to touch me there,

  to be the salve for what still feels like an open wound.

  The skin has healed but the scars grow deeper—

  When you touch them what do they tell you about my life?

 

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