Statistics
by Jane Rosenberg LaForge
Courtesy of the institute
that wouldn’t take my call
about the one dead woman
from a procedure half a century
earlier because she was an aunt
to no one. History registers only
in terabytes, in epiphanies
and readily identifiable wallops,
how the number of women seeking
to end pregnancies was small,
even manageable, so long as it
was only for the life of the mother.
This is what my mother meant
when she cried out, “Don’t be
a statistic, Janey,” because
studies show it is better
to break a surface directly,
rather than to poke blindly;
a push is more organic
than a vacuum or a pump;
a pile of dead skin is preferable
to a pitted face, or uterus.
Now, on to the scars.
* * * * *
Jane Rosenberg LaForge writes poetry, fiction, and
occasional essays in New York. Her third full-length poetry collection is Medusa's
Daughter from Animal Heart Press in February 2021. Her second novel
is Sisterhood of the Infamous New Meridian Arts, also in February
2021. Her first novel, The Hawkman: A Fairy Tale of the Great War (Amberjack
Publishing), was a finalist in two categories in the 2019 Eric
Hoffer Awards. Her poetry has recently or will appear in 8Poems, Thorn literary
magazine, Feral, Cease, Cows, and Fevers of the
Mind.
"because she was an aunt to no one."
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