The bed in the 40th Hospital in Yekaterinburg where I spent four nights with pneumonia.
On Thursday afternoon I called up my friend, lovely Anna Mikhailovna, who’s parents are both doctors to ask what to do about this cough that won’t go away and how to cure my troubles with breathing. Because I really had trouble breathing; when I didn’t cough all I did was fight to get enough air into my lungs in order to not feel dizzy and light-headed… Anna Mikhailovna’s mother told me to call a doctor and see if I might not have come down with pneumonia after having the swine flu. Said and done, lovely Anna Mikhailovna came over, and shortly after her cute Katya also, and they both helped get through the visit to my home by two Russian doctors. One doctor was mean and old, one doctor was young and kind and kept repeating over and over again: “I never thought I’d ever meet a Josefina in my life…” They listened to my breathing, then they put a mask on my face and together with Anna Mikhailovna I got to ride in a Russian ambulance to the hospital. There we waited for almost three hours before I got to see a doctor. The first thing the doctor said when he saw me was: “So you want to spend the night here?” I screamed: “No! No! First have a look, then tell me the sentence. Don’t condemn me to hospitalization just from looking at me…” He listened to me breathe, then he sent me to have my lungs x-rayed and after this I was hospitalized on Thursday evening. Since the nurse placed something wrong when putting medicine into my veins, I ended up spending the whole night without sleeping due to enormous pain in my right arm… Friday was terrible. They woke me up at half past seven to take my blood and then I cried, cried and cried for a few hours sitting on the floor and wanting to go home, home, home… On Saturday I woke up to a new life, and on Sunday my cough was almost gone and I could breathe almost normally again. But I was so tired from all the antibiotics that I slept until 5 p.m., after which I felt wonderful. Today – Monday – I was released from the hospital and now I’m home. I’m still not completely healthy, and I’m not allowed to go back to the university for a couple of days – that doesn’t mean that maybe I won’t still on Wednesday because I miss teaching that much – but I’m doing so much better now. The whole experience at the Russian hospital was traumatizing at first, but in the end I realize that it was exactly what I needed. I needed to get good medication – read: strong medication – and to just lay in bed and be fed good food by the kind man living in the room next to mine. All in all I’m glad that I got hospitalized, even though I would never go back there ever again. If I’m not feeling that way again, that is…
*
The Hospital Poems
I. Before You
It seems impossible now to believe
there was life before you.
A life where I walked, talked,
lived, was perfectly fine before you.
That life now seems so unlikely,
a life without knowing your name,
a time before seeing your face,
yet I remember I used to laugh,
and even smiled often before you.
But then you came –
shifting everything out of place,
shaking the ground under my feet,
expanding the sky over my head.
And then you came –
lifting everything upside down,
melting my stubborn heart,
breaking all my firm plans.
Yes, then you came –
arriving in all that you are,
showing all I never knew before,
taking up every inch of my skin…
No, then you came –
claiming every little part of me,
taking every little piece of me,
discovering every little pour of me.
It seems impossible now to believe
there was life before you…
II. The Incredible We
Let’s make a list
of everything I honestly
never thought I’d do
like go to the moon
or dye my hair
and unexpected color (green?!)
and I thought never
would I ever
think the equation me
plus someone else entirely
could add up to we.
In all the early mornings
after all the late nights,
I never thought
waking up to find
your chest under my head
could feel as if
I’ve won first place;
as if I’ve traveled
every corner of the globe
with my fingers on your skin,
as if I’ve seen
all the wonders of the world
with your smile in my eyes,
as if I’ve been
everywhere and made it all
without knowing at all
the greatest victory of all
was waiting for me
here
in you
in the equation me
plus you
equals we.