Michele Herman

I GAVE UP

I gave up things. I stopped

wearing jewelry and

shopping for clothes.

I stopped eating

dessert. I switched

to sponge baths in the sink.

When the dear dog died

I didn’t get a new pet.

When little things broke

I glued them and when

big things broke

I recycled their parts.

When the sofa fabric

shredded I gave away

the cushions. When I had

stored the content

in my brain I took

the books to the library

in a wheelbarrow.

I stopped scheduling

appointments. I turned

down offers of rides;

if I couldn’t walk or bike

I didn’t go. I gave up

haircuts, shampoo,

sunscreen (though I kept

a hat), shaving,

filing of all kinds,

dusting, vacuuming. I grew

my herbs in a pot

and I lived on what

I grew and I grew

so thin that when I lay

on my back in my bed,

which was the sofa

frame, my belly

sagged like a hammock

between the posts

of my pelvis. My knees

ground into each other

all night long but

I’d given up pills.

I gave up social

media and then

email and when

the computer

crashed I put it

on the curb. I made people

uncomfortable. They

began to shun me

when I began to smell

like a person. I gave

up people.

 

But I wasn’t ready

to give up places,

oh no. I needed

somewhere to hang

my hat.

Michele Herman’s novel Save the Village is coming out in February 2022 from Regal House Publishing, about the same time as Just Another Jack: The Private Lives of Nursery Rhymes, her second chapbook from Finishing Line Press. She is author of the poetry chapbook Victory Boulevard (2018), and her stories, poems, essays and articles have appeared in dozens of publications including Ploughshares, The New York Times, The Hudson Review, The Sun and Lilith. She teaches at The Writers Studio, and as a developmental editor and private writing coach she has helped many writers bring their manuscripts to fruition. She won the 2018 New York Press Association Better Newspaper Award for best column, is a two-time winner of the Willis Barnstone Translation Prize for her translations of Jacques Brel songs, and was a semifinalist for the 2016 Raymond Carver Short Story Contest... Full Profile