Following My Daughter’s Fitting for a Prosthetic Eye

“I am fascinated by the beauty of sight,
but I never crave for it,” a blind actor says, 
brushing his fingers across the petals of flowers 
in a softly lit bazaar.  The camera tracks 
from his hand to his grey-tinged hair
as a market breeze circles his linen shirt
and bamboo chimes patter the air.
Palm-size hollows of rain ripple
on the cobblestones, revealing there,
as the camera draws in, the digitized name 
of the hotel in which my family and I
temporarily reside.  The television loop 
fades to black then starts again, resetting 
the feed.  Beyond the second-floor balcony,
I can see in the hotel pool my two daughters
and their mother—Margaret bobbing 
in her chest-and-shoulder-strap floatation 
vest (a device somehow come to be known
as a “puddle jumper” or a “splash jammer”) 
while Sibley clasps her hands above her head, 
bends at the waist, and dives from the edge 
of the board, disappearing beneath 
the water then rising to the arms of my wife. 
So the cycle goes—Sibley climbs the ladder 
to dive again, and Margaret ambles 
from the pool steps to the deck, darting 
around the lip like a sandpiper.  
In a moment, I will join them, as I have 
so many times before, hotel after hotel, 
either before or after a visit to a hospital
or doctor’s office, their florescent-lit
or shades-drawn rooms—hollows 
of time, of waiting—spaces as shuttered 
as Margaret’s sightless left eye, 
stalking having grown en utero
throughout the vitreous, branching 
there like a tree in perpetual night, 
the eye’s architecture impervious to any 
window drawn with a surgeon’s blade. 
In Italian, the word “stanza” means 
“room,” and I often tell students 
to think of a room when selecting 
their words, that what is the body
but a collection of rooms?  “Lamentable” 
was a word one surgeon used regarding 
Margaret’s eye.  “Irredeemable” was 
another.  So the cycle goes, not only for us, 
but for the others as well—the young 
couple whose sightless daughter wakes 
at all hours, unaware of the transition 
between day and night.  3 a.m.she stands 
up in her crib and wants to play, her mother 
told us in the pastel halls of Bascom Palmer, 
and how can you hold it against her? 
Last night we slept, the father said, 
for five consecutive hours, the first time 
in a year, a slight catch in his voice
when he spoke, a quiver I have heard 
in my own words as well, like a hairline
crack in good china, or ripples on the surface
of a pond.  Researchers say that with no 
knowledge of sight, a person who is born
blind does not dream in images, 
but primarily in touch and sound. 
I thought of this today as my wife and I sat 
in our car following Margaret’s fitting 
for a prosthetic eye, both daughters asleep 
in their car seats, our engine idling 
as airplanes rose like glinting whales 
above us from what seemed like just 
beyond the rooftops of buildings 
on the other side of an unadorned park.  
My wife photographed Margaret’s eyelid 
closed over the new prosthetic, the cellphone 
snapshot a request from the ocularist to whose 
office we returned when Margaret woke, 
then back to the hotel where we are now.  
As I have so many times before, I place 
the palm of my hand over my left eye 
and review the words I have written
on my laptop screen, then look out 
to my family in the hotel pool.  
I have done this when driving or reading, 
when gauging a step from the curb—to try 
to see as Margaret sees, and answer 
the questions my wife and I have 
about Margaret’s perception of depth
or her field of vision, which is really 
a question about the future, about what can 
and cannot be foretold.  I turn my head 
and my family disappears into darkness 
at the ridge of my nose—a mountain range 
behind which they set.  I turn back, 
and they reappear.  Our dreams, 
those same researchers said, are a way
of rehearsing our fears, that we learn 
from them the ways in which to persist 
and prepare.  So be it.  We are most 
alike in that darkness, waking in fear, 
desperate for some calming touch, 
for the voice that whispers, I am here…

(from Don’t Do It – We Love You, My Heart)

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