Read The Language Inside Online
Authors: Holly Thompson
I peel off my jacket
grab the poem I copied
and read aloud—Jane Kenyon’s
“Otherwise” which I’d found
and shared with my mother
who hung it on the refrigerator
declaring
I like this Jane woman—
good attitude!
because my mom knows
that this Jane woman died of cancer
when I first read it on the computer
I liked the little everyday moments
the poet described and seemed to savor
so I now suggest to Zena that we do the same
make an otherwise poem
of simple moments that we savor
but Zena doesn’t look up
finally Zena spells
d-i-d t-h-a-t
you did that already?
I ask
and she looks up
what do you mean?
I say
with the guy before me?
she looks up again
oh
I say
sitting there stunned
the room feeling hotter and hotter
I take off my sweater, unwind my scarf
what should we do then?
I say
and I swear she tries to drill holes
in my eyeballs with her glare
do you have a poem in your head?
I ask
are you ready to write?
but Zena doesn’t look up
so I think about other poems I read that week
even though my migraine
seems to have blasted my fragments
of poem memory apart
finally I recall one by Garrett Hongo
whose Japanese last name caught my eye
one that told a story of a man, killed
as he put his laundry in his car
so I tell Zena that I like how that poem
tells a story of an actual incident
then reflects on it
and maybe we can do that
Zena scowls
spells
n-o p-o-e-m?
I bow, apologize
she spells
g-e-t i-t
I try to argue
that we don’t have much time
that I can remember some lines
that I can pull it up on my phone
that I can bring a copy next week
but her eyes are piercing cold
so I go to one of the nurses’ stations
ask if they would do me a favor
go to the poetry website and
please please please
print out a copy of that poem
“The Legend”
they do and I go back to Zena
and read and show the poem to her
I read “The Legend” again and then I wing it
sharing my reaction about
the language the dying man spoke
that no one could understand
and explaining the weaver girl
mentioned at the end
and how she wants to meet the cowherd
on the other side of the heavenly river
which is part of Tanabata
the summer star festival
which we celebrate each year
by hanging paper wishes on bamboo
but still Zena glares
so I suggest thinking of incidents
we can write about and react to
ideas?
I ask
she doesn’t look up
I brainstorm out loud
about a time I saw a man offer guidance
to a blind man at a train station
then walked him straight into a pillar
about a time I found a photo album
in tsunami sludge and Madoka’s grandfather
took me to return it to the owner
who gave me a salted plum
about a time I watched a man surfing
with his dog
and finally Zena stops glaring
and her face twitches
into a smile
I tell her the dog had great balance
and barked for more
I suggest we each
think up incident poems
for the next time we meet
I don’t say
next week
because, with the surgery
I doubt that I’ll
make it next week
she spells
d-o-n-t b l-a-t-e
I rush out and find Sam
as he’s leaving room 427
you’re late
he says
Lok Ta Leap was asking
so I stick my head in
say hello with my hands together
in
sompeas
like Sam does
kind of like we do in Japan
after tossing a coin into an offering box
or before we eat a meal
but I can’t remember the words
so I just smile
then we walk down the corridors
and out the doors into cold evening
what are the words again?
that greeting?
chum reap sour
he says
and I say it over and over
chum reap sour
chum reap sour
chum reap sour
and Sam looks at me
amused
I can give you a ride
Sam says
he explains he has Chris’s car
every Wednesday from now on
can take it to school
if he keeps up his grades
which isn’t so easy for me
he says
I’m okay discussing
but not writing or analyzing
or comparing and contrasting
I’m better with action
gymnastics
dance