Diabetes
A lover's body, a landscape of illness: mice, ants, and monkeys gnaw;…
Read more →A lover's body, a landscape of illness: mice, ants, and monkeys gnaw; yet love remains.
If your lover is afflicted with diabetes
don’t abandon him,
His heels might stop lending support
as if he were no longer bound by gravity,
a lone meteor traversing through the universe.
Maybe rub his feet to make them warm.
He might ask you to crack open his heel with a horseshoe
so that he knows his two unfeeling feet
are still alive, as if they are his own
and confess to you that a mouse
is nibbling on his heart.
Kill that mouse, so that it doesn’t eat up your lover’s heart,
after all, your old name is scribbled there.
He will show you red blisters that pierce his legs
and say that it is a grand colony of ants
who are under the impression that his skin is made of roads
on which they won’t stop running.
He will ask you to uproot their world
and tell you, ‘They don’t let me sleep.’
About his high blood pressure, he will say,
that a monkey is swinging on his head
as if it were a tree, and little red lychees keep falling —
their red rinds are hiding under his hair,
biting his flesh.
Your youngest child will rush through the door
and announce that ants are partying on spilt urine on the toilet floor.
Your lover will giggle, hiding his pain,
and you too must laugh along, sharing the hurt.
Listen patiently, for this illness doesn’t come alone
it brings along a lid that doesn’t let kidneys drink blood,
deposits cholesterol in the canals of arteries,
as his gut cries for food like a hungry beggar outside a temple.
Always keep a biscuit or a piece of bread at arm’s length.
don’t shy away from his bad breath.
His teeth have been wounded like deer in the wild.
Help him, don’t abandon your lover
who craves life like a rooster
caught in a butcher’s grip.