I always forget how much energy travel takes: both the literal kind, like the gas used to make the car move and my own energy, both to get ready to go and the driving and the return and putting it all away. Travel might give me some inspirations for future poems, but it doesn't do much for poetry writing or revising in the moment.
This March travel time is odder than most because I've gotten back from one trip almost immediately to leave on another. This week, I've returned just in time for Quilt Camp, a three minute trip up the hill to Lutheridge.
My travel is impacting Quilt Camp too--I don't feel good being away for 2 weeks at a time, so I'm going to teach today and tomorrow. Thursday morning I need to be here, doing my Lutheran Confessions class.
This morning I go for my yearly mammogram, and I found myself trying to remember if I'm allowed to have breakfast. I thought about the pre-reqs for bloodwork and for a colonoscopy, both of which might require fasting. I thought about all the markers that a urine sample can discover. I wondered if I had the workings of a poem.
Earlier this morning, I thought I did. Now I'm not so sure. But here's the first stanza, as it is right now:
In the hours before my mammogram,
I try to remember the rules
for this particular scan.
Can I eat breakfast?
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