Thursday, April 23, 2026

PARKINSON'S AWARENESS MONTH AND POETRY MONTH (every month to me)

 I Meant To


I meant to put those
sixty-three names
and email addresses
in the BCC blind copy
space, not the CC 
copy space. I meant to


send it to him, not her.
I meant to swallow not
drool, on the computer,
my lap, your sleeve, my
arm, the floor, that first
edition, in the drawer.


I meant to walk and
move with that feline
grace someone once
said I had, not wobble
and stagger like an
old wino. I meant to


hit the “y” not the “t”
the “h” not the “g”
the “b” not the “v”,
return not send,
amends not amen.
I meant to stand up


straight not bend, to
sit upright not slouch,
to not fall down and
get stuck between the
couch and a hot pipe
that burned my back


like the prolonged
sting of a fierce slap.
I meant to stay twenty-
nine or forty-nine, not
be seventy-nine turn-
ing eighty in May this


way, drooling and
stumbling and un-
able to make a fist
with my right hand
or grasp a utensil in
the proper way but


instead need foam
additions to the
handles for my one
or two fingers that
can still curl without
help. I meant to be


the exception to
obviously aging or
a long gone legend
by now not a bent
over drooling old
man who still often


feels like a woman
inside, but I’ll accept
what I’m left with for
as long as I can and
still be grateful for all
that I’ve been and am.



—Michael Lally (C)) 2021


appeared on the Best American Poetry blog, 7 Jan 2022

and is included in Best American Poetry 2023 (Scribner, 2023)

Sunday, April 12, 2026

OLD FRIENDS

 

Two of my closest friends for over fifty years came to visit. Karen Allen who lives nearby so visits regularly and Terence Winch who lives in DC where we all first met and hasn't been here in over three years but I talk to on the phone at least weekly. My lap is covered by a hand towel and a paper towel to deal with my unpredictable and uncontrollable drooling, and I'm not giving the finger, that finger is just usually inadvertently stiff (from arthritis and Parkinson's related dystonia), both of which (the drooling and stiff middle finger) seem appropriately poetic justice for me .