The Mermaid Learns to Walk

The Mermaid Learns to Walk

The sand around her refracts and shines
like glass. She focuses on each glittering

grain, each new salty breath she takes,
so that she doesn’t really feel her green

fin split into two milky white props.
She marvels at the way her scales, scallop-edged,

flake off to reveal such a smooth
surface. She is naked and awake. Her hair

tangles around her body like seaweed,
binding her to the sandbar. He takes

her hand without asking and she smiles
a tongueless, toothy smile. It is true

that every step pierces the bottoms
of her brand new feet, each grain

grinds into her skin. Yet, she remains
both silent and lovely. She simply smiles

and breathes, wonders at her new world,
leaving a trail of dark red footprints in her wake.

*****

If you’ve read my blog at all regularly, you know that I’ve written a lot about my knee injury for the past 6-ish months.  In my writer’s group, I’ve decided to write explicitly about this experience, because I feel like the injury-healing-rehabilitation process is a really visceral experience. 

My only problem with this topic is that it feels like I’m totally in my head and my (subjective) experience and it’s starting to get claustrophobic.  I need to broaden my lens.  As I was falling asleep two nights ago, I tried to remember any myths or fairy tales that involved walking or legs, and I seemed to recall that Hans Christian Andersen’s The Little Mermaid included those themes. On yesterday’s day off, I looked up the story.

Boy-howdy was I right. There is so much in this story, about male-female relationships, adornment, sacrifice and of course, having legs, that I may just turn it into a cycle of poems.  We shall see.

4 Responses to “The Mermaid Learns to Walk”

  1. Beautiful poem! Sometimes you can say more by saying less. This is a perfect example.

    Keep up the good work, both in writing and healing!

  2. I like the sense of transformation in this, and the acknowledgement that transformation is not going to be easy….

  3. Loved this poem. I’ve written a few mermaid poems; Hans Christian Andersen’s tale’s take seems so warning and judgemental. If you haven’t seen Ponyo by the Sea, Miyazaki’s take on the same story, you should; maybe it will inspire more poems? I think I wrote three the night after I saw it. It’s meant for children, but it’s visually beautiful and like all his films, highly hallucinagenic.
    I’ve been struggling with foot problems (broken bones, torn ligaments, sprains) for a year, so I share your claustrophobia! I’m tired of not walking, not walking on my own! All good wishes for a speedy recovery…

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