Select Page

Pants

Amy Nichol

Poetry
Feels like
I’ve seen
More underwear
Than a Marks and Spencer Bra fitter
Teenage girls in matching sets in candy colours
Asking for the morning- after pill.
Mature gentlemen in white cotton-y -fronts and vests
To keep the chill off their dicky hearts.
White haired ladies with flower names
Held up and in by greying cream scaffolding.

The strange privileges of medicine.

You analyse the murmur that they may never hear
But might kill them.
You look into a hundred ears
But will never see your own.
You ask about itching down there, and discharge
And look inside the most surreal of places
With big, metal levers.

You stand in a magnolia room
And the family thank you with red rubbed eyes
For sedating their father so he can die in peace
And you don’t know what to do or think or say,
His face imprinted in your hippocampus
(Let’s keep it medical not emotional)
Until

You fill it up with people’s pants
And systolic over diastolic
And writing labels on bottles of blood
And get on with the job
Of strange privileges.

Whole Person Care – Year One