Published: April 26, 2007 03:02 pm
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Night Work
January O'Neil of Beverly
After the families have visited for the evening, tethered their well wishes like Balloons to the backs of chairs, taken photos of the first hours of life, my mother Checks in on the preemies, often healthy but occasionally too yellow, or pink, or blue. Deflated and in need of oxygen, they are held together by some order, Exhausted by the urgency of being saved. For every tiny Fledgling that leaves the unit, there is always another in need of touch. Gloved, my mother cared through a thin layer of separation while Holding the head of a baby born smaller than a shadow. I think she liked the all-nighters, especially in early January, babies born just after the New Year. She liked doing the Kind things that love cannot do: adjusting another woman's breast, Lifting the pillow under her head so the baby slips just above the Mother's ribs, offering advice or comfort before returning to the NICU, the tectonic plates of mother and child drifting together then apart. Often she delighted in the midnight coos, a love song for the Phantom ache of babies she could never carry, those tiny loaves Quick, unleavened, so eager to take touch like communion, while she loved what Remained, leaving her impoverished soul open and gaping. She shuffled through our house as if they were long, antiseptic corridors, There but not there. Such is the life of one in service to others, Under no illusions about the gift of grace. My mother, whose Voice is the sound of love becoming, seldom wondered What became of those raindrops, whose first days of life were X-rayed, poked, prodded--their sentences commuted to time served. Yet, they will not remember this time when they were barely more than Zygotes, as it should be. As if they were never there.
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