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Michael Pedersen: Janis

13th September 2024

Coulson: HFFD, 1-3, 4 hourly,  

McCulloch: SVD, prim, meaning prima gravida, first birth. 

 

In her breast pocket, starched sharp, or tucked 

into her butterfly cap, the wee pen rests;  

snug as a cat on coals, so not snug at all.  

Even so, Janis inks them in, the shift’s newborns:  

satin soft & raw as ripe fruit. She’s a maternity nurse,  

post-birthing care: at the tail-end of the gulf  

between the thing itself and the naming  

of the thing. Babies are wiped, weighed, fed,  

and pray to god that’s all. Sticky eyes, clean  

with water. Eight on the left breast, eight  

on the right, a healthy first feed; 

humilactor at the ready all the same.  

 

Darnborough: ELSCS, decomps only 

Henderson: SVD, prim, hip dislocation 

 

Janis is preparing serum, as behind the curtain  

more mother’s push into the body’s bondages  

and breaking points. It’s all hearts on deck  

to quell the panicked sweat of boogeymen.  

Blue babies need rescued, need 4% oxygen,  

all those heirlooms waiting for their colours  

to rise; skin too can rainbow back to life.  

In an ideal world: matrons, sisters & big boss  

(number seven) would all throng in. In reality  

it might be just Janis, nerves singing,  

a fresh twenty and left alone to save a life.  

Gargantuan is the pressure on a tiny chest,  

on a nurse’s mettle, broken glass 

in the words that deliver broken news.  

Though mostly, it’s life, heaven praises,  

seventeen born this single shift.  

 

Vance: SVD, 6-5, muscy  

Miller: SVD, jaundice, 10×10 

 

No white and red roses, not together, not ever!  

It’s a deathy portent says number seven. 

Same goes for whistling, Janis was marked down  

for that – there is no lilting country music 

no Joni Mitchell or REM chuting down  

the hospital corridors, yet life’s rapture hymns  

in every cradled clutch. Whistling on the trot  

home to Abbeyhill. however, is permitted.  

It’s not a route marked by obelisks  

but by Napiers Herbailst and Dofos Pet Store.  

She’ll take the long way round if it’s been  

a night of it. Down London Road 

– where tulip petals droop like tongues 

licking zephyrs – through Holyrood Park  

and its impossibility of gorse, becoming unseen  

amongst a blaze of gold, green & thorny soldiers.  

Even the sun is invisible in the flames of a fire.  

Home now, Janis lights a joss stick instead; 

hippy. In the sky, a rip of purple, in the air  

a cry of distant bells, tired yet alive. 

 

Beveridge: KFRD, SCU, underline – special care unit. 

Lee: I HFFD, girl; II AB, boy – twins. 

 

Janis is my mum. The Janis of today  

lights up talking me through this,  

fetches the kitchen tongs to demonstrate  

forceps handling. She’s right enough,  

white is an awful colour for a uniform  

when there’s so much blood, gunk  

and meconium about. Next comes  

the nurse’s notepads, her last words  

on the wards are dated 28/04/1976. Mum  

moved on, and I believe there’s some regret  

in leaving, though it’s a gossamer grief  

as she did it for love and friendship,  

but knows she could had borne it, stomached  

the heart-thwacks, celebrated life’s wins.  

That last baby was named after her, Lee 

her maidan name. I hope the kid was told  

some soppy story, that before me and my sister 

were born another twirp gargled grateful. 

 

In the morning, over eggs and curried beans  

the chat’s moved on to flowers flourishing  

in the garden. The scale of them, their seasonality,  

whether it’s time to scatter wildflowers  

over the back bit, take some of the heat off, 

lure back the bees and hedgehogs, that allusive  

troupe of newts. She’s wondering, else I am,  

at what point the garden outgrows her,  

whether it’s getting there. That baby’s alright,  

she says unexpectedly, except she never, 

just thought it. What I mean to say is:  

wow, you did that, except I don’t,  

too busy taking notes. 

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