I started wearing a heart rate monitor All the time I got it originally to figure out my threshold on the bike I haven’t gotten around to doing that yet When I first put it on I guess it hadn’t made proper contact I looked down at the watch It blipped a tiny radiating pulse like a submarine Doppler Searching for a beat My friend pulled my shirt up licked the sensor and stuck it back to the place just beneath my breast I laughed There it was
Now when I walk I look at my wrist obsessively **** Tracy waiting for a secret message
I am thirty now And I worry, nightly; I will be too old too soon To be a mother I worry that I am a child
I interpreted an ultrasound For a deaf person A communication with the beyond The doctor searched for the right spot Made contact And I heard the muffled, galloping sound Of someone trying to survive underwater I opened and closed my fist to show her the rhythm of a pulse
I have no god And I don’t want one But what I do want is a sign That I am alright
Tonight I sit on top of a closed toilet and watch water fill the bath The best part of the day A reentry to the womb Right before I get in I remember myself I unhook the monitor from my ribs And get in Submerged, I listen for the galloping But hear only neighbors Shifting furniture downstairs
When I’m done I can’t help the compulsion To put it back on And when I do I get the message