The Wisdom Factory
By Alisha Goldblatt
By the airport where jet engines riff and fly
humdrum in the background, you’ll find the
cutting room floor. There’s bloody gauze and
extractors on hand, eerily cheerful nurse–escorts
shuttling the wounded out of the lot. Their heads
are wrapped in ice diapers to ward off the swells
One after one they exit without those
hard vestiges to remind them where they began,
when chewing was a job for the decisive hunter. After
coming back to consciousness (the stupor itself an
outtake cut clean from the film), my daughter woke
laughing, drank texting until I took the phone and
righted the gobbledygook of fat, anesthetized thumbs.
She quiet–roared with a mouth that wouldn’t open wide,
a little girl growing soberer and soberer. Already she
was missing the drugs and those nubs in the back of the
mouth, ancestral and taken from her just as she
begins to cut her teeth on this very knife–edge of life.