A Sticky Story
Okay, this happened to me yesterday. Just sharing in a light-hearted spirit of gratitude for my personal situation as well as for the extraordinarily lucky circumstances we find ourselves in here in Aotearoa New Zealand (as opposed to somewhere like Syria, or in a boat on the coast of Greece, or in the slums of Kathmandu). My family and I are lucky enough to live near the hills where we can walk and to come back to a lovely warm house where we can isolate ourselves from others worse off, but sometimes the unexpected happens ...
Sticky Situation
for Jeremy
My knees are knobbly
like sticks, and our family
went for a walk yesterday
along a straight track above
the Lyttelton Tunnel motorway,
straight as a stick with nodules
and bends and splits in it,
splits that had opened
in the earthquake ten years before
where under-rivers had since
gouged out holes for stepping around,
but the other week we watched
a digger from our lounge
fill the cracks with its crooked arm
like a branching stick,
and so when we reached
the section that had been overgrown
with Lucerne trees, fennel and
broom up to my chest,
the digger had made a path
lined with broken sticks
and the twiggy muehlenbeckia
was making a comeback, a vine
not really a stick, that wired
and matted over the scrub,
before I saw the cut end of a stick
on the path and a flash of terror
like light through trees
struck, the pain of a sharp stick
through bare skin, and the moment
I could choose to step across
to the path where Zip
was walking, clearer of sticks,
before the stick struck
and I was crying Oh oh
and pinching the skin near my shin
to hold the flaps together
over the hole where the stick
had gouged and blood pooled
in an under-river and dripped
over my sock while Zip knelt
and said sit down so I can see
the damage of the stick
and Rata said I can’t look
but you can use your fleece
tied round your waist
which I did, and Zip knotted tight
as a tourniquet wound up
with a stick, and then I lay down
in the dried grass stalks
that felt like sticks at the side
of the motorway, and waited for Zip
to return in his non-stick Nissan,
from which I could phone
After Hours or our neighbour
the doc, who in our 18 years
as neighbours we’d never called
over our fence of sticks
but since it was the days
of two-meter measuring sticks
and lockdowns, I envisioned
the nurses dressed like riot police
with thermometers long as batons,
and I called Jeremy the doc,
who soon after pulled into
our driveway after a day in the sticks
at his clinic in Belfast, and Zip
brought out the boiled water
and cotton buds that had stick potential
for poking and jabbing, while I sat
on the landing outside our door,
and Jeremy at a distance
of two sticks poked and
jabbed, disinfected and stuck
my hole together with sticky tape
while I grit and wished
to bite on a stick,
and then he said,
there’ll be no walking for a bit
and I thanked the doctor
for I was never so glad to have
such a good stick in our neck
of the woods.