Better Luck Next Year

Cancer is a rare and still scandalous subject for poetry;

and it seems unimaginable to aestheticize the disease.

-Susan Sontag from Illness as Metaphor


 


BLNY


Cancer poems, meet the whole world. Whole world, meet the cancer poems.


Low Ghost Press. Out July 23rd.


It’s a limited edition 100 copy run.


I’m eternally grateful to Kris Collins at Low Ghost Press for turning the hot mess manuscript I gave him into an actual book and to Nathan, for copy editing this thing like a champ.


And to all the presses that published these poems beforehand – 48th Street Press, Anti-Heroin Chic, Beechwood Review, The Blue Hour, Carcinogenic Poetry, Clockwise Cat, The Commonline Journal, Dead Snakes, Drunk in a Midnight Choir, Drunk Monkeys, Exercise Bowler, Eye on Life Magazine, Hobo Camp Review, Homestead Review, Horror Sleaze and Trash, Kind of a Hurricane Press, Mad Swirl, Mas Tequila Review, Misfit Magazine, Pine Hills Review, Pyrokinection, Red Fez, Revolution John, Verse Virtual, Yellow Chair Review, and Your One Phone Call – thank you.


Thank you for giving me a space to scream and cry and laugh. I’m eternally grateful.


You all helped keep me alive through this.


And while I’m saying thanks, thanks to In Between Hangovers for taking The Bridge That Doesn’t Go To Manhattan and Cancer Math and also thanks to Drunk in Midnight Choir for taking these three poems. Also thanks to CommonLine Journal for Radiation Day 17 and Red Fez for My First Visit to the Apple Store: April 2016


BETTER LUCK NEXT YEAR is, thus far, the most honest and personal writing I have ever undertaken. I’m glad it is going to exist in the world. It is literally the lemonade from the lemons.


If you’re in Pittsburgh on July 23rd we’re doing a reading at the East End Book Exchange. Come on out. I promise not to be depressing. I mean honestly how bad could it be. I’m gonna spend some time talking about my tits!!


Oh and I’ll have a bunch of broadsides from Chris at 48th Street Press to give away.


Like this:


poem002


Give the title track a spin. (originally published in Red Fez)


Better Luck Next Year


I’m not even sure why I kept it so long


this pewter pink ribbon pin


that was given to me during radiation treatment,


 


that first day when the nurse walked up and said


I have something for your collection


nodding at all the pins on my bag


and placed in my hand a little pink ribbon


a symbol


 


a mark


 


and I took it with quivering fingertips


there in my hospital gown


waiting to be burned


 


because I didn’t know what else to do.


I put it on my bag with the others


and there it stayed


through all of treatment


 


through the tears


and the panic


the sick dizzy feeling


in the middle of the night when I got up to pee


the one that told me


 


You’re going to die. Sooner. Painfully.


It stayed there through the injections


and the long hours spent in the waiting room.


 


It stayed there through telling my parents


and my friends and the depression


and the anger that crashed against me like a tidal wave.


 


It stayed there until


yesterday


when I looked down at it


and realized


I don’t want a symbol


and I don’t want to be a warrior.


 


I thought of all the young women that came before me


the ones that died


and the ones that lived


and all the others out


there right now blossoming


this burden in their holy bodies.


 


I thought of all of things people told me


when I told them about this hurricane of a tumor in me


 


and it was yours that came back to me:


 


Better luck next year, I guess.


 


You said it not insincerely


but with the exacting honesty


of the unchangeable


unfairness of this life


 


and I took the ribbon pin off my bag


because I am not a warrior


or a survivor


but just a young women trying to live with a disease


and I hurled it over the


wrought iron of the cemetery fence


and I kept walking


not caring to see which grave it landed at


 


knowing that at least


it wasn’t mine.


And finally, today, June 10th, is Cancerversary Year 2.


This girl’s still alive.


Suck it, cancer.


Peace, love and starbursts,


Ally


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Published on June 10, 2016 08:42
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