Hour Twenty-Three, someone or something missed

Divided

I never knew you personally,
just as a small, quiet echo
that had briefly moved within me
and just as quickly was gone,
here just long enough
for a recorded heartbeat,
a video in tandem with your sister,
squirms, wriggles, and gentle thumps,
a prayer, a wish, and a hope.

I knew you as a reflection of her,
never as the unit you were meant to be,
never to hear “ohh, they’re so beautiful,”
they, the duality, mirrored and identical.
Here so briefly, and gone.

9 thoughts on “Hour Twenty-Three, someone or something missed

    1. Elyssa, this is part of the story of the death of one of my twin daughters inside me, after which I carried both of them, one alive and one dead, for another ten weeks. Forgive me if the ending “leaves something to be desired.” Perhaps this poem is a bit better:
      Stilled
      Gel was smeared on my swollen
      belly and paddles were placed
      over the bodies of my babies.
      One girl squirmed and wriggled,
      warm and vibrant in her world.

      The technician’s face fell, then
      froze as she pushed the paddles
      firmly into my belly and searched
      for two heartbeats, confirmation
      of continuing life and growth within.

      She found just one beating heart
      below my own. Saying nothing,
      she left the room and found the doctor,
      as I stared at the image of two babies,
      one silent on the screen by her sister.

      She swayed to the racing rhythm
      of my own aching heart, a semblance
      of life bumping her tiny body listlessly
      against my inner belly, while I vaguely
      registered the doctor’s bedside voice.

      His practiced demeanor conveyed 
      suspected truth, droned on in a background
      mutter, until strangled words finally
      emerged from the frozen hole that
      was now my heart: “Please, just take me home.”

      Or maybe this one has a better ending:

      The List Maker

      In the chaotic cacophony of
      every day, a list used to calm
      me, bring order to
      one small event–a concise,
      dense packet of
      information, focused layers
      crossed off step by step, my
      world in ten lines or less.

      Twenty years gone, and
      still I’m haunted by
      lists that encompass the
      birth of my girls, thoughts
      logically ordered, progress
      to the goal:
      two healthy babes,
      brought home.

      Two lines on a test
      led to two beating hearts
      in my rounding belly, and a
      joyful list:
      2 cribs
      2 infant car seats
      2 high chairs
      2 albums, and one
      tandem stroller.

      Twenty weeks along,
      forty centimeters
      circumference,
      contractions controlled
      day by day by
      2 small pills, and one
      easy chair to hold
      day and night
      one frightened me.

      Counting contractions
      hour by hour
      in a list of
      day after day,
      2 liters of amniotic
      fluid drawn away by
      one large needle
      through my belly 
      close by my girls
      to keep contractions
      at bay.

      Until one day the
      contraction count stops
      no more days to account
      on that list. The 
      ultrasound showed
      one beating heart,
      and another one stilled,
      one girl there,
      one girl gone away.

      I returned home to
      my joyful list, to
      savagely scratch
      out 2’s and s’s, no
      need for plurality now:
      crib
      infant car seat
      high chair
      album
      stroller

      No longer believing
      my lists
      can ever
      control my world,
      one lovely girl
      where there used to be
      two,
      one gone,
      baby
      gone.

      Please consider in your commentary that many of the poems posted have intense personal meaning for the poet.

  1. This must have been very challenging to write. I know this story and the heart break from which it comes and I feel all of the pain of it all the way through…especially in the ending – especially in the ending.

    1. Thank you, love, that means so much to me. It’s probably not the best written version of this story of mine, as I was really tired at this point, but hopefully I can improve it in revisions.

  2. You always take on the hard things to write about. In this one, your motherly instincts and affection for both daughters is moving and persuasive. Those who underestimate this bonding between mother and unborn child are ,well, unimaginative or uninformed. The writing is good because it is clear and direct as to your feelings without being clinical in details the way the explanation is. We can figure it out. You will certainly want to write about this at greater length in both prose and poetry and see how they go together and complement each other, as they do in the discussion here.

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