THERE WERE MANY SURGERIES by Erin Lynn Marsh

before she turned twelve years old.

She was shown photos of herself as a baby

with both hips in traction and the body

cast that followed. That little girl was propped

up like a doll in the blue and yellow chair,

her bottom half bound in white plaster,

appearing to passersby as an unfinished plaything.

There were openings in that pale shell

for elimination—her humanity made real

by the smell of the cast after a few months.

She could not see or touch her private places, but

others could. She was a paper doll and someone

took a pair of black-handled scissors and lopped

off her bottom half. When the woman she became

imagines pleasure, it ends at her belly button.

From the waist down she knows she is plastic—

pale and dull to all touch. Sometimes she remembers

that other women feel what’s between their legs

is equal to love and tries to find a man.

Later, she will look at herself in the bathroom mirror,

hung high enough for her to avoid her torn-up

hips and legs—see her version of complete.


Erin Lynn Marsh is a poet living and working in Bemidji, MN. She is the author of Disability Isn’t Sexy (Jules Poetry Playhouse Publications, 2019), which was nominated for a 2019 New Mexico-Arizona Book Award. Her work has appeared in Post Road Magazine, Sugar House Review, Paper Darts, Emrys Journal, wordgathering.com, and the anthology Hers: Poets Speak (while we still can), Vol. 2 (Beatlick Press and Jules’ Poetry Playhouse Publications, 2017), edited by Jules Nyquist. She was a 2019/2020 Region 2 Arts Council Artist Fellow and was previously awarded two Individual Artist Grants. You can find her online at erinlynnmarsh.com.

Click to read this piece in the Disability Pride Anthology.