I have amassed a collection of gloves: thick leather for winters, thinner liners for the drier months. Each pair is spent at the end of a season. I think of them as a kind of temporary cushioning, though protection is problematic. I misplace many. I’ve substituted socks and hats and even hot pads in a pinch. Some gloves leave streaks on my face and my clothing, further marking me. All bear holes and wear at the stress points.
“You have the hands of a craftsman,” Leslie says. I measure mine against hers. We have the same long fingers and prominent veins. I sometimes wince when she kisses them, but I know she’s right to reach out with tenderness instead of this harsh judgment that I can’t shake. She brought me a picture of a painting. One huge hand. She pointed out the marks and stains of service. “Let’s call this beauty,” and she held mine.
It is better to think of my hands as honed for use, for this life on wheels. It is gritty. I wear the spray from wet sidewalks in Pioneer Square. It is jarring. I feel rough surfaces through my torn and bleeding thumbs. I am connected, and I am raw.
Today, I want to make a new pact with the world. I am extending my battered hand. Take it. Let’s vow not to shame ourselves for how our lives have shaped our bodies and how our bodies have shaped our lives.
“I am extending my battered hand”, you write. I take it, Randy. I reach over to clasp your beautiful, battered hand.
As a person with MS, I join you in the vow “not to shame ourselves for how our lives have shaped our bodies.”
What an honourable “new pact” to make with the world, as I stumble forward with difficulty, and as your battered hands propel you through your neighbourhood.
Stronger in solidarity. Onward, Denise.
I love the way you write about love, it makes my heart feel full. Beauty is one of the things that holds me. I’ll try to see the beauty in this body that feels like it is betraying me. Thanks for your words.
Gorgeous. Your blogs (and Leslie’s poetry) are invariably balm to the soul, even, or especially, the ragged one.