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March 2025

Poetry
Two Poems

by Caroline Sutphin

Put Me Under


The nurse reminds me to say goodbye
to the boyfriend,
splitting a thread on his shirtsleeve
and holding my underwear
in a plastic bag,
all nervous hands and dry lips.


The IV sings in my veins, a lilting siren sound
of cold and sleep, as I roll down halls my senses
cannot track.


The operating room is bigger
emptier
than I thought it would be
as if I first needed to feel small
to be made small.


The siren dulls to a whisper, and the angry white
of it all fragments


beneath my eye’s touch.
The nurse straps down my arms, and I forget


I have arms at all or bones or flesh, I even forget
my breasts marked with black Sharpie, angry lines


anticipating scalpel cuts. I forget it all. Restraints
mean nothing; I float free.


The swirl is interrupted by black,
my lashes dipping in pools of rest,


dancing the siren’s ballet.

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