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a journal of literature & art

The Literary Review

Issue 9                              Page 38

Full Body Exam

The beautiful Dr. Barbara Baxter swept into the exam room, her

            flaxen hair draped over her white doctor’s coat.

She was as beautiful as I remembered from my first visit in which

            she recommended that I receive a “full body exam.”

She asked if I had any Irish in me because, I thought, Irish skin

            incubates the big C. I regretfully admitted that I did have

Irish in me. She laughed and began her examination. She eased

            down the top of my paper gown while telling me, in her

sing-song voice that, after she took her boards in dermatology,

            the examiners played recorded bagpipe music.

“Are bagpipes Irish or Scottish? she wondered, as I felt her hands

            move down to my shorts. “It upset some people to hear bagpipe

music after the exam,” she purred, and peeled off my tighty-whities.

            She studied my business, if you know what I mean, and then,

as if asking me to pass the salt said, “Would you pick up your penis

            so I can look underneath it?” She wants me to turn it over?

I thought. Well, if she grabs my balls, it will flip itself over.

            Then she grabbed my balls with her

unspeakably soft hands and noted that they sported some purple moles, but

            “nothing to worry about.” Frantic to prevent the inevitable, I said,

“Did you know that the English hated bagpipes so much they considered them

            weapons of war?” She smiled, “There’s a mole on your thigh, next to

your scrotum,” she said, while still cupping my jewels. “Here, look at it.” I raised

            my head, beheld the beautiful Dr. Barbara Baxter holding my nugget pouch

in one hand, while pointing to the mole on my thigh with the other. “I see it,”

            I lied, and lowered my head. “Do they play bagpipes only at funerals?”

she asked, a sugary lilt to her voice. “Oh no,” I gulped, trying to control my quivering 

            voice, “they play them at weddings, at all occasions.” “Turn over on your tummy

please,” the beautiful Dr. Barbara Baxter said. I obeyed and felt her hands nudge down

            my skivvies again. “You have a mole on each buttock,” she said, gently replacing

my underpants. “It’s nothing to worry about.” Her fingers on my hiney caused

            my lips to tremble, my toes to twitch. Had there been a power outage

my body could have served as an emergency generator. After my exam, the beautiful

            Dr. Barbara Baxter gave me extra samples of hand and body lotion.

How precious these emollients were to me—especially now. As a token of undying gratitude,

            I promised, as we parted, to send her a CD of bagpipe music.

Trepanning

I flunked my license exam in clinical psychology

            by four points—a respectable score

for the over forty crowd in California,

            but a flunk in Pennsylvania.

Foolish me, I’d studied the body of knowledge

            the test purported to examine

when I should have focused on learning how

            to take a modern multiple-choice test.

Some of the items were all incorrect. You

            had to learn how to choose

the least incorrect answer. Should I have

            used that strategy with my patients,

encourage the least incorrect way of dealing

            with their depressions and obsessions?

Remember, only use Ivory soap when you

            wash your hands 200 times a day.

I fell into a deep depression. My analyst,

            a lovely man who knew as much

about psychotropic medication as I did

            about astrophysics, put me on Tofranil,

an antiquated antidepressant from the sixties.

            Almost immediately an impenetrable

plaster wall appeared in my large intestine that

            required enough daily Metamucil to

blow me up like an irradiated tomato. Then,

            Mr. Happy donned a sombrero and took

the fast train south to Tijuana where he embarked

            on a protracted siesta. Try as I might, I

couldn’t get in touch with him, if you know

            what I mean. So clogged and cramped

on one side, limp as a bizkit on the other, I

            thought of trepanning, the ancient treatment

for depression. The Greek physician would

            take an iron stake and pound it into

the melancholic’s head. If the patient

            survived, he was no longer depressed.

If he didn’t…well, at least they tried. Hippocrates

            observed that patients’ depressions often

disappeared at the mere mention of trepanning.

As usual, the Greeks had the right idea.

            I stopped the Tofranil and enrolled

in a course on how to take multiple choice

            exams. I learned how to pick the least

incorrect answer, avoided forever the chemical

            trepanning prescribed by my analyst,

and passed my license exam with flying vapors.

Back on the Farm

My father’s death was easy enough,

or so it appeared. July 8, 1964,

a hot summer night in the

doldrums of Cheyenne.

I’d camped out on our couch

in the living room. His last

venture into my parents’

bedroom a passing blur—

the only time in my 14 years that

I didn’t kiss him goodnight.

My mother’s shrill voice

shattered the early-hour silence—

Ward! Ward! she cried.

His snores, loud and grating

staccato blasts—

only inhales.

At 4AM I straddled his body,

pounded on his chest like they

did on Ben Casey. His pinched

brow tight across his livid face:

he looked confused.

Sixty years now and I still

wonder what dream pierced

his psyche that last evening.

Was he back on the farm with

his brother Francis, sipping

warm milk from the pail

under their cow, or had he

fallen into their pond, his

tight muscular body caught

on something in the depths—

his breath, a temple of air, held

until that last desperate gasp.

 

© Tim Tomlinson: Your Dreams

Hotboxing

We’d jam into the boys’ room on the first floor at St. Mary’s High.

Twenty squirming adolescents in a space made for eight or nine.

We should have renamed that bathroom the cancer ward. With

visibility near zero, the smoke-cloud so thick you could cut it

with a crucifix, someone would light a fag and pass the

gleaming death stick around. The idea was to keep puffing, one

boy to the next, until the gasper turned into a red-ashed lung dart

of unsmokeable heat and finally gave out. We must have smelled,

all of us, like the bottom of an ashtray left to bake in the back of a bar.

The priests and the few male teachers had their own restroom

and rarely ventured into our smoke-cave. Every now and then,

with no predictable frequency, Sister Hendrick, whom we lovingly

called “The Great White Whale” for her girth and pristine

Dominican habit, would open our bathroom door, gag and yell,

“You asses, get out here!” That’s what we loved about her, the only

nun we had who swore. Still, we ignored her entreaties to exit our

pack-generated gas chamber, so obsessed we were, as Ahab with

his fish, determined to feed our addiction to capitalism’s leafy Lethy.

Cowbell

I was in my teens before I realized that a cowbell originally dangled

from the neck of an actual cow. Did I finally encounter a cow

with its mini-gong swaying under its rawhide neck, or did

I see one in a John Wayne or Gabby Haze movie, or on one

of the ubiquitous cowboy TV series of childhood:

Roy Rogers, Sky King, Gene Autry?

Before my enlightenment a cowbell was, to me, the obnoxious tinny rattle

that some athlete’s mother brought to one of our football games

and shook whenever our quarterback, Mike Barrett, hit Ace Evans 

with one of his infrequently completed bombs during the perpetual

losing seasons endured by the St. Mary’s Gaeles in Cheyenne.

I put cowbells in the same category as other irritating noisemakers like those

straw horns that made awful noises as they unraveled when you blew through

them at some miscreant’s birthday party or that goofy thing you’d spin that

sounded like a ratchet.

A cowbell came mounted on my first gold spackled cheap Japanese drum kit.

There wasn’t much of a place for the cowbell in sixties rock but I played it

 on You Can’t Do That by The Beatles and Honkey Talk Woman by the Stones—

never connecting it with anything but an outdated prop that added rhythm to a song.

I was a callow city boy far removed from the truth of what gave me milk,

what trod on the dust of dairy farms, and the white health squirted into pails

eventually transformed into cream and butter.

We are held hostage by our upbringing and the lacunae it inevitably creates.

A cowbell clanged of dung, dun, and dirty callused hands—what high school

football, asphalt, and amplifiers took for granted and left behind.

Miracles That Keep Me Going

For Judy

It’s her sleek slacks on Mondays,

the way she waltzes into our porch-room,

even when in a wheelchair.

On Tuesdays it’s her black and white

blouse that has always reminded me

of the strength of an orthodox

prayer shawl painted by Chagall.

How much I enjoy the careful way

she cuts into her eggs on Wednesdays—

how she portions a bit of yoke atop

a slice of bagel and eases it into

the mouth I’ve so often kissed.

On Thursdays it’s her “Raindrops are

Falling On My Head” T-Shirt that causes

the corners of my mouth to rise.

Fridays bring blousy colors of blacks, blues,

orange, and turquoise with a splotchy scarf

to match that makes me think I’m

living with a Matisse painting.

It’s her earrings that sparkle on Saturdays—

how they bounce and jangle against her

comely earlobes while she recites

a poem she’s just written.

Then there are Sundays, our Sundays, where

her face, doe eyes, aquiline nose, and olive

skin turn our house into a temple of

her benevolent presence, a place

where the sacred blooms.

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