I think of my skeleton as a
canker, burning hollow in
a deep, deep cave.
My son cries about my skeleton and
I tell him,
“hush now! It is just bones.
It is just white, not blood or bed.”
And it is not.
I have a long, thin canker and
I have a man with knitting hands.
He wraps me in warm stitches;
in strong pursuit.
He points me with pressed thumbs
just enough that
I pound with his heartbeat.
I am a canker and he is a mouth hosting
an ulcer. He cleans,
cauterizes me with searing tips and
I cry about my skeleton and he says,
“hush now, it is just bones.”
But, it is not.