Dana Martine Robbins
  • Welcome
  • Author Biography
  • Poems
    • On the Tide of Her Breathing
    • The Red Pocketbook
    • After the Parade
    • ​Portrait of the Artist as an Old Woman
    • Cello
    • The Meter Reader
    • Phoebe’s Blues
    • The Goldfish
    • Litany for My Husband
    • The Butterfly Dress
    • We Said Never Again
    • The Lobster
    • Death of a Flamingo
    • The Orange Angels
    • Empty Heart Vegetable
    • The Apple Tree
    • American Gothic
    • Undressing Barbie
    • Ode to My Husband Folding Laundry
    • Kitchen Angel
    • At The Beach
    • The Renovation
    • Gratitude
  • Essays
    • Remembering My Father on World AIDS Day
    • To Light A Candle
    • The Embodiment
    • Playing Patty Cake With One Hand
    • No Ordinary Cats
  • Books
  • Podcasts
  • Contact Page
Gratitude

My weak leg cramped after seven hours in the airplane seat, I walk bedraggled
and haltingly, in the hallelujah moment of safe arrival as the kind steward helps
me off the plane; much younger than I, he pity-flirts with me, then urges me

to use a wheelchair. “I’d rather walk after sitting for so long,” I say, as I pass
through a gauntlet of a dozen wheelchairs lining the hallway with porters
standing by. “Do you need help, ma’am?” they chorus.  I repeat my explanation

remembering my slow pilgrimage through the stages of survival after the stroke:
how I began in the ICU, flat and immobile within  a maze of  life-giving tubes,
then moved to a bed, where I pulled myself up to sit by grasping the “monkey bars”

suspended above me, until I gained strength enough to be pushed in a wheelchair;
I trembled the first time, sensing prison between its aluminum rails, felt like an infant
on a potty as I use a commode chair and a shower contraption with a hole in the seat.

After months crawling across therapy mats like a penitent at Lourdes, my limp leg was
encased in a hip to ankle cage  for the slow lurch between metal bars; next, a walker,
then a four pronged cane, then a standard cane, until finally, I walked unaided. 

How would the people who offer help in the airport know that to me the apparatus
of disability has all the appeal of the electric chair?
As I limp past the stations of empty, waiting wheelchairs, my eyes fill as I picture

one that may someday again have my name on it.  After the long passage through
customs and baggage, the cool air touches my face and, although it is midnight,
I am still on my feet.

**
Published in The Examined Life Journal of the University of Iowa,  
Carver College School of Medicine, Issue 3.2



 






Web Hosting by FatCow