Meri Bender
Poems
Regrets Only
I had my first orgasm in San Diego
In a hotel room after watching a James Bond movie
The kids asleep in the next room.
I had my first orgasm in junior high
In the girl’s restroom
As I tried to insert my first tampon.
I had my first orgasm at 18 months
Pushing my diaper against the crib.
I stopped having orgasms when I visited my gynecologist.
He inserted a tool in my vagina
And proclaimed vaginal thinning, dryness and deadening of tissues.
I stopped having orgasms when my period stopped
Only to discover them in adolescent fantasies.
I stopped having orgasms when I turned 85 or 90
And so what? 100.
I wrapped them all in tissue
And placed them on my diaphragm
Gave the kids the diaphragm with instructions
Throw it in the ocean
Catch the wind and below soar and land in a pile of sea anemones
Throbbing in their own time
To the echoes of the world.
The Surface of Everyday Things
Don’t think it, just continue.
The clothes stick to the side of the washer, flattened by the force of the spin cycle.
The ketchup fell out of the refrigerator.
Red, red—thick, oozing out.
The plane arrives Sunday afternoon.
The family in a reunion of sorts.
I float, skim the surface
Of everyday things.
Calling the gas man to fix the heater as the house cools to a frigid self.
We wait—we pass the ketchup, heat the English muffin and butter up.
The date is set, the calendar circled as though that was necessary.
We talk about the candidates
Caruso’s blurry past and fallen promises.
We look at statistics, but age colors everything.
I buy extra sheets for the children, making beds, dates are circled.
I give orders, calm myself with attacking the clutter.
Feeling endings approaching, but from where.
What corner holds an answer? Blank spots cover scary thoughts.
Come here, younger one, sit on my lap and I will comb your hair.
Wednesday, it is.
Prelude
I look at my gnarled hands
Pressing down the keys
Translating a Chopin Prelude
To the unwilling recalcitrant piano
My thinking is slower
My deafness surrounds me
But I struggle and plod on
Trying to discover the beauty
In the deceptive notes
It is after school
The den is filled with the afternoon sun
It filters through the blinds
I wander in, Joan, my disabled sister, 6 years older
Is finishing up her reading lesson with Mrs. Brennan, her tutor
I twirl, and twist as I glance at the papers
Mrs. Brennan is putting away.
Words
I know I can read
And Joan struggles, slowly learning to put the words together.
It comes easy to me
But I don’t want to leave her behind
/She was always kind to me
Caring for me in her own style
When I wet my pants in Kindergarten
She laughed
When I thought there were burglars at the bedroom window
She laughed
I didn’t question her judgement
It was comforting
I try to put two hands together
Left never listens, comes down one or two
Notes away from its goal
I feel clumsy, stupid, dealing with my aging brain
And the seduction of the music which floats outside my fingertips
I didn’t hate Joan until I became an adolescent
Afraid to bring friends home
Joan, in her twenties, surviving two major breakdowns
Staying in her room, smoking and watching TV
I didn’t know how to explain her
Describe her unraveling at 18
It was a double, triple, quadruple whammy
Hydrocephalic at birth, slow, uncoordinated
Finding barriers she didn’t know how to handle
When I tell people about my piano experience
How hard it is
Feeling clumsy, slow
Struggling
They become inspired.
But Joan never inspired anyone
Or did she?
I look at our children
One daughter wrote a novel about her.
One daughter, a child psychiatrist, treats struggling teens
One daughter also wrote a novel about a child who transforms into an inanimate object
I am transforming
Butterfly to cocoon
Backwards, into a more restricted existence
I beg forgiveness for my escapade into
What—The lure of mastery
My sister could never achieve
I wish to wrap my arms around her and whisper
I love you as you are
But I never did-I always hoped she would get better.
Advice to myself
If you drive in the fog at night
Follow the center line in the road
As it weaves thru Beverly Glen
If the shoes are too small
Put them on a stretcher for 2 days
If your husband falls off the toilet
Run next door for help
If he clamors for help
But discards people like shredded wheat
Don’t worry Frontier will fix it
No TV—no outside voices
Repair comes online via the cell phone
Find worry under napkins
In shower
Raining down what ifs and Its gonna be
Put Home HealthCare Aides in a bottle
Send them out to sea
To retrieve them 1/2 hour later
As he falls again
Put all the agains in a box
Throw them out the car window into the fog.
The Bathtub
I sit in the bathtub
My broken arm healed in its own way
Hairy, stiff, rigid
Not reaching nor twisting
Framed by the limits of my current non existing cast
I am 12 years old
Water covers my growing pubic hair
My Mother sits beside the bathtub and holds my healing arm
Slowly, twisting it
So I can become normal
The arm isn’t the problem
My emerging body rages against my Mother’s ample bosom
Adolescent beckons, I want to jump in
But my body is slow, perferring the comforts of childhood
My Mother cries as she twists my arm
I cry, wanting her out of my life
Don’t look at me like that
I, child of your bones
Wanting, willing, waiting to be dragged into womanhood
Praying for my period at night
When my sister suggested I might be a boy
The arm has shed its hair
I can gradually turn it
Touch my hand to my stomach
“Thank You” I tell my Mother
Wapping towels around my undeveloped body
Praying for boobs and blood
And getting my Mother in the bathtub instead.
Meri Bender
Meri Bender grew up in Los Angeles and studied to be a ballet dancer from age 9. When she enrolled At UCLA and took a choreography class her focus changed to developing as a choreographer. She choreographed, taught and trained dancers at the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts, Santa Monica College and Loyola-Marymount. At 80 she retired and discovered painting and poetry. 85 is liberating. She is married to psychiatrist, David Bender, has three wonderful daughters and six grandchildren.