Episode 44: "Tincture" by Andrea Gibson read and celebrated by Ali Mezey

"TINCTURE" by Andrea Gibson RIP

Imagine, when a human dies,

the soul misses the body, actually grieves

the loss of its hands and all

they could hold. Misses the throat closing shy

reading out loud on the first day of school.

Imagine the soul misses the stubbed toe,

the loose tooth, the funny bone. The soul still asks, Why

does the funny bone do that? It’s just weird.

Imagine the soul misses the thirsty garden cheeks

watered by grief. Misses how the body could sleep

through a dream. What else can sleep through a dream?

What else can laugh? What else can wrinkle

the smile’s autograph? Imagine the soul misses each falling

eyelash waiting to be a wish. Misses the wrist

screaming away the blade. The soul misses the lisp,

the stutter, the limp. The soul misses the holy bruise

blue from that army of blood rushing to the wound’s side.

When a human dies, the soul searches the universe

for something blushing, something shaking

in the cold, something that scars, sweeps

the universe for patience worn thin,

the last nerve fighting for its life, the voice box

aching to be heard. The soul misses the way

the body would hold another body and not be two bodies

but one pleading god doubled in grace.

The soul misses how the mind told the body,

You have fallen from grace. And the body said,

Erase every scripture that doesn’t have a pulse.

There isn’t a single page in the bible that can wince,

that can clumsy, that can freckle, that can hunger.

Imagine the soul misses hunger, emptiness,

rage, the fist that was never taught to curl—curled,

the teeth that were never taught to clench—clenched,

the body that was never taught to make love—made love

like a hungry ghost digging its way out of the grave.

The soul misses the unforever of old age, the skin

that no longer fits. The soul misses every single day

the body was sick, the now it forced, the here

it built from the fever. Fever is how the body prays,

how it burns and begs for another average day.

The soul misses the legs creaking

up the stairs, misses the fear that climbed

up the vocal cords to curse the wheelchair.

The soul misses what the body could not let go—

what else could hold on that tightly to everything?

What else could see hear the chain of a swingset

and fall to its knees? What else could touch

a screen door and taste lemonade?

What else could come back from a war

and not come back? But still try to live? Still try

to lullaby? When a human dies the soul moves

through the universe trying to describe how a body trembles

when it’s lost, softens when it’s safe, how a wound would heal

given nothing but time. Do you understand? Nothing in space can

imagine it. No comet, no nebula, no ray of light

can fathom the landscape of awe, the heat of shame.

The fingertips pulling the first gray hair

and throwing it away. I can’t imagine it,

the stars say. Tell us again about goosebumps.

Tell us again about pain.

From Lord of the Butterflies (Button Poetry, 2018) by Andrea Gibson. Copyright

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Episode 45: The Moving Body with Jo Cobbett: Including the Body, Personally and Collectively

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Episode 43: The Released Body with Siv Jøssang Shields: Proust, Bees and Neurogenic Tremoring