What do others do
when everything--
I mean, the only one one’s ever loved
disappears behind swinging doors?
Walk the hallways
Look at the art on the walls
Write in the notebook
Any of it can bring trouble
What I saw
she never could
It helped me see
what I couldn’t see
through the alternative
lens—then again,
and later, to see
with ordinary eyes
what I’d seen under
medicine’s dizziness.
Ordinariness of the third eye
Third ear listening
OTHER STAIRS AND STAIRCASES
And your stairway reaches up to the moon
Van Lose Stairway, Van Morrison
Here, there are two. Hospital staircases.
The Grand and the Values.
The Notebook finds them early
while Karen’s in surgery—Med
evac’d last night over the mountains.
I follow the crescent moon over the mountains
in my car. What’s this, I ask
myself seeing stairs through the open
door beside the elevator. Walk
through stars when you can. Entering
through ER after midnight, Security walks me
to my wife’s room, where Anthony,
night nurse brings me chair
and blanket, sleepless in altered state,
coffee from the nurse’s pot. The open
Notebook knows its practice, walking
me to two stenciled words over the door:
Our Values. This is level II, and I’m descending--
wall on my left hand-painted, Respect,
brush stroke, flourish, followed by,
eight steps later, Integrity.
I’m stopping at one, writing,
walking back up. Integrity,
Respect, these steps, concrete,
are for healers, and I’m
ascending, following the notebook,
filling in the medicine: Excellence,
Collaboration, differing brush strokes
in the middle: Our Values,
Stewardship, Kindness--
the Values Staircase at Good Samaritan
has taken me in, sleepless, altered
walk, writing, breath prayer,
not reverie, a kind of vertigo
that a pen on a notebook page
trusts. And here’s another
stairs, with a brass plate, labeled Grand,
varnished and curving hand rails.
The Grand, as you would imagine,
your hand attracted to the burnished
dark rail, warm and rich. Marble steps
and an overlook where one can look back
into the entrance and framed photographs
of donors and the Board of Trustees.
The gift shop behind glass doors
is on your right, and to be honest
I didn’t find this one right away
and yes, this is the one that gets me
in trouble, stumbling main entrance,
the woman with identification
around her neck, spotting the notebook,
asking, Where do you belong? Where
is your wrist band?
I’m not in trouble, exactly,
...but where did you sleep?
This is a hospital, and America
is a dangerous place.
Will I be sent to a motel?
The temporary wrist band
walks me to art that transports
all of us in and out of margins.
Icicle Creek, frozen outside of Wenatchee
where we danced and said salmon prayers
with natives and poets from Alaska
through Canada altering my vision
years ago, and Karen is in surgery,
and this painting of Icicle Creek stops me
perhaps the surgeon’s knife slicing the groin
now, as I look into pools of water
beside large boulders, less than an inch,
accessing the vein
for the catheter heading to her heart
where it will deploy the pacemaker.
I don’t know this, looking at Icicle Creek
frozen paint, salmon-filled, recalling
native salmon elder-told stories decades
back. A man torn open
walking halls with an open notebook
being held by poets and artists,
healed by ancient medicines
life-sustained by technology
that bewilders me daily.
A robot delivering medicines
passes me in the hall. Walker,
caminante. Packing a tooth
brush for the night drive
to follow Karen, I pick the poet
Machado for accompaniment:
Caminante, son tus huellas
el camino, y nada más.
Walk with the open notebook.
Water waves—estelas, wake,
vigilia velorio. Walker. Rostro,
sendero, pista, recorrido. That fast
to John 17:8: Now they know
that everything you have given
me is from you. How things
happen—Father Greg Boyle
before me in a church pew
So that we may be one.
Home boys, catheters and bow ties.
Two doctors, William Chardack and Andrew Cage,
wearing bow ties, connect a dog’s heart
to a pacemaker in 1958. Two years later,
the bow tie team implant a pacemaker
in a 77-year old man with complete blockage
who will live for two years before dying
from natural causes. Two men
in bow ties. Cardiac pacemakers span
centuries. Luigi Galvani discovers
the muscles of dead frogs’ legs twitch
when struck by an electrical spark--
The bow tie team coming through
time following electrical sparks in frog legs
come from Basho hearing the frog,
plop, splash in water, walking.
[On our first date, I take Karen to a play,
Try to remember, and follow.
The poems of e.e. cummings.
I carry her senior picture
with the stacked hair to Viet Nam.]
The Van Lose Stairway, it reaches
up to the moon. It’s art on hospital walls.
Send me your Bible. Send me your Gita--
words I sing wrong for decades.
glass jars for Good Will, jelly, Karen
The Notebook stops me before a shield.
Once, in our middle age, cleaning out
the garage, practicing triage? sorting
says, No, Save that one! startling me
Karen, it’s a jelly jar for Christ’s sake!
Sleeping on it for days, and then,
in the garden, God-listening, God
giving. After the losses,
as a child, Karen—Were there things
that had to go that you just couldn’t bear?
Something you remember? In the basement
in our house on 46th, in Ballard,
there was one corner—everything,
there were trunks, and chests,
and everything was my mother’s,
that’s all I knew. And I never looked inside.
Gold paints and all the swirling yellows
into clouded shadows created by a single petal,
you can see the brush strokes. Brush stroked
petals and into the pistil—back out
to a touch of sky. This is the Clock
for the Long Now. A man looks into white
water on Icicle Creek. Deep pools
and a fishing rod, water swirling salmon
room-sized boulders. Henner Schroder’s
Turtle Clan Paddle Dancers,
Sand-casted. A full planet dancing.
Blue seas circumscribing the dance,
like Achilleus’ Shield in the Iliad.
Here’s a reflection--pics of water and sky
hung behind a parking lot of mobile gurneys.
Stretcher parking. I walk outside,
through the rose garden to the blue tables
circumscribed by multi-stemmed trunks.
I set my notebook and Machado down,
pull up a blue chair wondering, Who
planted these trees? How are they called?
Later, I’ll ask the woman at the entrance
for their names and she’ll tell me she’s
asked that all the time. Why aren’t they
labeled in brass plates I ask her.
Are you kidding? This is multi-care!
She says. Seriously, I love my job!
They’re Katsuras. With heart-shaped
leaves. Identified by an Iphone
Footstep hallway walking. Miles of doorways.
The GPS system that takes me over mountains
and through the city at night. Hallway art
and two staircases. A two-hour surgery.
Two nights in a notebook. Monks
and wandering poets following
the crescent moon, while Karen sleeps.
Anthony, the nurse, covering me with a blanket,
and sleepless in my altered state, lost
and looking for coffee, with my notebook,
the other one appears beside the elevator.
I know where elevators go
but I am led by the notebook and footsteps,
and the door is open.
Cement steps
painted words on walls, brush strokes
giving way to the words, levels up and down,
one in the middle naming itself—this is
Our Values Stairway, reaching
up to the moon, my values falling upward
Richard Rohr, or the other way,
painted words elevate the man going down,
back out to art-filled walls,
so much water, and boats
liminal, like ones carrying Tu Fu
into Triple Gorge and poems
of the immortals. A Glass triptych
triggers them setting out in their boats.
The hospital is meandering water.
Tu Fu ties up on Yellow River
flowing to aboriginal stars,
this one, Well Rope, night
shot into Star River, the Milky Way.
and I’m walking it up and down,
its four levels not for the workout
but for the words. The Stairway
reaches to the garden walk-around,
through roses, to the sculpture framing
the hospital high rise housing
the medicine and the medics,
housing the art. The garden leads
to other things, too, the blue tables
tucked beneath the circle of multi-stemmed
trees—What are they? What are they?
multi-stemmed Katsuras. Shaping,
a stadium of trees Dr. Williams opens
for me in asphodels, Flossie wheels
Karen out of surgery back
to her room only in the poem half-smiling,
looks at me, looks at Karen,
and the screen monitoring
every heart in the room, saying,
Look at that Pacemaker
go to work. This is footwork.
Between time, walking liminal steps
descending, half-rest in each step
the only outcome God allows,
no guarantees, muffled
saxophone distortion, the notebook
it’s own weather report, trouble
making god of amplified wonder.
Jim Bodeen
10 May—17 July 2024
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UNTITLED
These are the loneliness steps
of the back stairway. These
are the steps I walk to work
Take the door
off from the kitchen
Jim Bodeen
18 September 2024
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BOATS ON HOSPITAL WALLS
[While the beloved is in surgery, the man stands in front of a triptych of fused glass called Healing Hands * Caring Heart, by the artist Richard La Londe. The Triptych is a gift to Good Samaritan Hospital, Puyallup, Washington from the artist, and was installed in 2005.]
--an empty journey on that Star River raft
..and immortals set out again in their boat.
Autumn Thoughts, Tu Fu, trans. By David Hinton
I. A hand pulls back a sea-green curtain
The curtain is a waterfall
a river fish jumping white water
to the ocean. Morning sun fish
before outstretched eagle wings
above it all Star River Milky Way breath
breathing cloud breath birthing
below it all
boat water birth canal
hand-held pouring water forth
two-person boat
heads streaming electricity
hand-held horns
rocking on water
the two of them
the multiplicity
waves and hands
II. Cloud Breath River
winds around sun and mountain
snow-fed rivers like hands are hands
holding, housing hand-held water boat
palms up issuing sun-life water colors
hands underneath the boat
part-boat, part of the boat
two faces, three lidded eyes
one-eye issuing water force
back in, or from water, all ways
house and mountain
forested and radiant and rocking dream-held
III. Green waterfall curtain
held back, pulled back,
eyes uncertain on right side
eyes, three of them open
three hands head river holding
planet held by an upper hand
waterfall a kind of vestment
green gown
red heart hand drawn
blood filled those same green
oxygenated and unclear undefined
Jim Bodeen
11 May-14 June 2024
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CODA:
I.
This is the Values Stairway
This is the Wall of Words
Here’s John Bott’s Circle of Friends—Watercolor
Emanuel Paniagua’s Butterfly--
Do you see the four chambers of the heart?
Oil on paper
Oh! the labyrinth! Can we walk the labyrinth?
This is, this is, this is more than a day’s journey
II.
Help me
Don’t hurt me
Be kind to me
III.
Values Staircase Coda Revisit with Two Karens
Then I entered through the Emergency Room
ER, baby
Today we’re walking through the front door.
That must be the Grand Staircase.
●
So Karen B and I drIve over and back on Tuesday. Karen Sch, AKA Dr. Sch and I meEt for lunch in cafeteria. Dr. Sch says, “I never had one day of fun at this place in three years.” And she had walked these Values Stairsteps (the back way, the staff way—chipped paint, worn rails, cement ((with values on the walls))--what I saw—what she never did) pretty magical, I think, for us all. Karen B. Didn’t make the full tour, but had her own time in coffee shop. It both helped me see what I couldn’t see—and helped me see with ordinary eyes what I only saw with magical alternative odds the first time when Karen was in surgery. So I’m trying to make some beginning sense of that today.
●
EMANUEL PANIAGUA
Don’t know yet. Neither do I.
Don’t know. This visitation
wants to take another look.
A guided tour of sorts. The role
of healing in halllways
while the beloved opens
for the knife in God’s otherness.
I had thought this once,
never having come for fun,
Did you see his name? The artist’s?
Bread and water. What?
That’s his name,
Bread and Water.
Who made the butterfly.
●
IN BACK OF THE NURSE’S STATION IN ER
No, No, the hands go up
No pictures, No. No, no,
it’s OK, he’s with me, he’s come
to see, More Than A Day’s Journey
behind you. I brought him here
for this, this oil on canvas
by Allison Collins. What do you see?
See? In the painting? What can you find
in the landscape? No, no, Thank you,
leave that stuff where it is
in front of the painting, protocols
for triage, this is where you save
lives and it belongs, it’s part
of how we work and dream—back
in that other hallway, looking
at the butterfly, now whenever,
what a lovely word,
whenever you look
at the butterfly, you’ll see
in addition to ancient doorways,
the four chambers of the heart.
This morning stillness right
before surgery walks you
from the labyrinth.
Jim Bodeen
17 September—2 October 2024
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Thanks for these and for huellas.
ReplyDeletelines mirroring the Katsura's heart, giving back
ReplyDeleteI've been meaning to speak with you about this experience. Now I understand. Thank you Jim.
ReplyDeleteLori Simmons