Hummingbird Wing-Whir
I like to think of the uterus as a lighthouse
says the sonographer, gently pushing
the plastic wand deeper into my vagina.
I flinch at the pain, bite my chapped lips.
The ovaries can float loose from their lighthouse,
she continues, when you no longer have a uterus.
It makes them harder to find. Her metaphor
is not perfect, but is far more poetic
than what I expected from an E.R. visit.
She says she can’t tell me what she sees,
but the wand, like a vibrator with none
of the fun, digs harder and harder into
my left side. She’s giving herself away.
Then, a steady whirring sound. The tiny
roar of blood rushing around my eggs.
This is the closest I will ever come to listening
to a child’s pulse within my own body.
Earlier, the doctor, cherub-cheeked and kind,
said if the CAT scan revealed nothing,
it would be reasonable to determine
the endometriosis is back.
He did not see me go bloodless.
I think I even managed a small smile,
no product of pleasure or glimmer,
just an automatic, polite knee jolt.
The endometriosis is not back.
The fatty lining of my abdomen
is inflamed. Rare, says the doctor.
Mysterious. Then: Mesenteric panniculitis.
There’s a bloody hitchhiker on my left
ovary to boot, a complex hemorrhagic cyst.
My face crumbles as I ask for something
for the pain. The doctor smiles. Tells me
to take Advil. Tylenol. I gather my paperwork,
the books I brought but was in too much pain
to read. Limp my way back to the parking lot.
Later, I will sob, because I now have another
rare disease, not understood, possibly autoimmune.
Because I may need surgery number nine, to peel loose
the cyst I can picture only as jellyfish. Because even
with Percocet, it hurts to stand for three seconds straight.
Later, I will sob, but all the way back to the car,
the hummingbird wing-whir of the ultrasound
machine rushes in my ears. Such a beautiful
sound, but all I can make out is hope in reverse.
I’m a woman without children.
I’m a queer who’s too sick to adopt.
I have three cats, which is enough because it has to be.
I’m an optimist without a lighthouse.