three stories

three stories
i was born after death and before

i came along like an accident, just after my mother’s first miscarrage. i dropped into her life like a toy from a claw machine. who’d thought she’d win a prize, much less the one she wanted.

days turned into weeks and weeks into months. her belly grew disproportionate. her thin frame couldn’t restructure her body with how i was growing.

the doctors declared i was going to be premature; their idea was to let my mother stay pregnant until she had a natural birth. i was born a month late; christmas eve turned into late january. when going into labor, they brought an incubator and placed it at the end of her bed. the next day, i came, breaking her hips and almost ripping her in half: 8 pounds, 12 ounces; 24 inches long; 1987; poverty’s healthcare.

they had to circumcise my eyes.

the next baby died. my mother hadn’t realized she lost the child until it was floating beside the bloodied toilet paper. in a panic, like a hiccup, she reached the knob and pushed. the fetus was flushed like diarrhea. in a silent shock, she stepped away and left the room, sleeping for days. she could feel the new emptiness inside her, like a balloon deflating.

 

in the perspective of my mother

my womb is a cloth sack. multiple attempts at harboring life have been suffocated by the stained walls: the umbilical cords detach & grasp at what little resources exist. children fall from my uterus like ancient coins, deformed & faceless. they drop into a well & become ghosts who cry—mother, mother, why have you disposed of us. a profile comes from the shadow. the light absorbs into what should be the body & it stays void. it holds my hand; wet, puffy fingers slide up my arm. it reaches down my throat & i cough myself awake. the doctor tells me that the cancer has grown more than the stillborns. it thrives in the waste. i go home & give it a name.

 

daffodils

i sit on my porch, in a wooden chair split down the center by rain & moisture. there are two couches stacked in our side yard, diseased. we discarded them years ago after four of our babies died from parvo. they’re a statue of remembrance. the weather is refreshing. spring blooms like the yellow threading through thick weeds in the abandoned house’s yard, next door. it’s been cold for months. i smoke a cigarette. a breeze blows through my house, drying the floors. last night it rained & the humidity festered down in the splinters of the old hardwood. time shifts in my memories; the couches fall apart & rot—the fabric is torn & mold grows through them like an abandoned chernobyl. the cigarette burns & we’ll never remember the ashes. the dogs are buried in the backyard: we cover them with earth, their bodies like pieces of treasure. a lone cloud gets lost in the baby blue.

ARTICLEend

About the Author

john compton (b. 1987) is gay poet who lives in kentucky with his husband josh and their dogs and cats. his latest full length book is "my husband holds my hand because i may drift away & be lost forever in the vortex of a crowded store" published with Flowersong Press (dec 2024); his latest chapbook is "melancholy arcadia" published with Harbor Editions (april 2024). You can find him on twitter @poetjohncompton

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Photo by Pavel Danilyuk: https://www.pexels.com/photo/ultrasound-of-an-unborn-child-7108416/