The Lowell Review 2022

Page 32

2022

Twenty-Two Staples charles coe

W

hen you enter a hospital for major surgery the first thing you give up, or rather the first thing taken from you, is the sense of boundaries around your own body. Your clothes and possessions are bundled and shipped off to wherever, you put on a hospital gown, someone wheels you into a big, bright operating room, puts a mask over your face, and while you’re off in Never Never Land they lift the hood and get to work. No one’s asking for your advice or permission. If you’re fortunate enough to wake up after surgery, people you’ve never seen before and might never see again stroll into your room at random times to poke and prod and stick you with needles and peer at the blinking lights of the machines you’re lashed to. They bring you juice (no solid food of course) and reload your IV antibiotics bag. Just as I opened my eyes a few hours after my operation and thought, “Hey, I’m still alive. How ‘bout that?” the nurse came in to say, “So now we need to put in a catheter.” (“We?”) “Take a deep breath,” she said, “and let it out slow.” As she did the deed I realized it had been nigh on thirty years since a beautiful young woman had handled that particular appliance. But fortunately even though I was still addlepated by general anesthesia and an IV painkiller drip I managed to push-broom enough brain cells together to realize I should maybe keep that insight to myself. A couple of days after surgery another nurse strolled in and asked if I’d had a bowel movement and said, “When you do, don’t flush; we need to check it out.” I’d never fielded that particular request before. When the surgeons opened me to rearrange my giblets my system freaked and took a few days to get back up and running. When I finally did my business I felt proud and pleased, like a newly potty-trained toddler. (“I make poo-poo!”) Too bad nobody gave me a Cub Scout medal to pin on my robe . . . . On the afternoon of Election Day 2020 I’d gotten a ride to Mass General Hospital’s Emergency Room, feeling as though my chest was in a vise that was slowly cranking tighter and tighter. I could hardly breathe. I thought I was having a heart attack but it wasn’t my heart; it was my gallbladder. Which had to come out. Immediately. Nowadays a gallbladder operation’s usually done with the aid of a laparoscope, a long thin tube with a light and camera attached that lets the surgeons poke around your innards and take a look. They make two or three tiny incisions in your abdomen, maybe an inch long. Then snip, snip, ease out your gallbladder like a deflated balloon. It’s usually a minimally invasive procedure. Some people go home the same day, or maybe spend a night at the hospital. That’s the best-case scenario. But the surgeons discovered my gallbladder wasn’t just filled with stones, it was infected. So they had to open me up old school like a can of tuna fish, otherwise it might have burst. I had an e-coli blood infection that kept me in the

18

The Lowell Review


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Articles inside

John Suiter & Paul Marion Commemorating Kerouac: An Interview (1998

28min
pages 168-184

Contributors

18min
pages 185-196

Dave DeInnocentis Marin County Satori

7min
pages 165-167

Joylyn Ndungu Equilibrium

1min
page 164

Music Passions as Writer’s Centenary Is Reached

20min
pages 154-161

El Habib Louai Two Poems

1min
pages 162-163

Janet Egan Saturday Morning, Reading ‘Howl’

1min
page 152

Billy Collins Lowell, Mass

1min
page 153

Mike McCormick Stumbling Upon The Town and the City

7min
pages 149-151

Emilie-Noelle Provost The Standing Approach

9min
pages 142-148

Sean Casey Tom Brady

1min
page 141

Fred Woods The Basketball Is Round

1min
page 140

Patricia Cantwell Kintsugi (A Radio Drama

11min
pages 112-120

Michael Steffen Arturo Gets Up

1min
pages 136-137

Charles Gargiulo Marvelous Marvin Hagler and the Godfather

5min
pages 138-139

David R. Surette Favors: A Novel (an excerpt

14min
pages 121-126

Neil Miller How a Kid from the East Coast Became a Diamondbacks Fan

10min
pages 127-130

Sarah Alcott Anderson Caution

1min
page 134

Carl Little A Hiker I Know

1min
page 135

Bob Hodge Our Visit with Bernd

6min
pages 131-133

David Daniel Remembering a Friendship: Robert W. Whitaker, III (Nov. 9, 1950 – Sept. 16, 2019

8min
pages 108-111

Ann Fox Chandonnet A Postcard from Sandburg’s Cellar

1min
pages 106-107

Sheila Eppolito Hearing Things Differently

3min
pages 101-102

Joan Ratcliffe The Incessant

10min
pages 91-94

John Struloeff The Work of a Genius

6min
pages 103-105

Meg Smith Ducks in Heaven

1min
page 77

Susan April Another Turn

3min
pages 95-96

Crowdsourcing the Storm Boards

8min
pages 85-90

Stephen O’Connor A Man You Don’t Meet Every Day

11min
pages 97-100

El Habib Louai Growing on a Hog Farm on the Outskirts of Casablanca

1min
pages 81-84

Alfred Bouchard Patched Together in the Manner of Dreams

1min
page 76

Dairena Ní Chinnéide Filleadh ón Aonach / Coming Home from the Fair

1min
pages 74-75

Bill O’Connell Emily on the Moon

1min
page 72

Dan Murphy Two Poems

1min
page 71

Peuo Tuy Saffron Robe

1min
page 73

Carlo Morrissey The Boulevard, July 1962

1min
page 70

Bunkong Tuon Always There Was Rice

1min
pages 66-67

Moira Linehan Something Has Been Lost

1min
page 69

Grace Wells Curlew

1min
pages 62-63

Chath pierSath The Rose of Battambang

1min
page 64

Richard P. Howe, Jr. Protecting the Capitol: 1861 & 2021

4min
pages 40-41

Paul Brouillette A Pilgrimage to Selma and Montgomery

16min
pages 42-50

Helena Minton Daily Walk in the Quarter

1min
page 61

Richard P. Howe, Jr. Interview with Pierre V. Comtois

20min
pages 51-60

Amina Mohammed Change

2min
pages 26-27

Catherine Drea Beginning Again

6min
pages 35-37

Living Deliberately

31min
pages 15-25

Elise Martin An Abundance of Flags

4min
pages 28-29

Mark Pawlak New Normal

1min
page 31

Malcolm Sharps The Mask of Sorrow, a Tragic Face Revealed

5min
pages 38-39

Kathleen Aponick Omen

1min
page 30

Charles Coe Twenty-Two Staples

8min
pages 32-34
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