1.
I tell you I’m getting a tattoo to cover my scars. Some kind of tree, perhaps, the branches reaching across one scar, the roots wrapped around another. A living thing. An ancient bristlecone, a saguaro, a juniper, purple with berries. “You’re allergic to juniper,” you say, and I nod. I do not ask, “But isn’t that the point?” And it isn’t true—I don’t really want the tattoo. I trace the scars with a fingertip, the thin, hard edge remembering the blade. The evidence of fracture, wound, fragility. The fine white light, the pucker of skin, the pink star where the bone broke free.
2.
I am crying again, and you tell me you’re worried about me, that I carry too much grief. “You let it accumulate,” you say, “instead of letting it go.” Sometimes I think about this, and I am angry. Other times, I wonder if you’re right. I know with each new loss, there’s a heaviness in me, dressed in too many layers, wrong for the weather. You ask, “But what will happen to you as the years wear on? There’s nothing but loss ahead.” I do not say holding onto these losses scares me less than trying to let them go. I do not say the weight of them prevents me from floating away and disappearing. I do not say I am more alive—with pain yes, but alive—every time someone else I love has died.
3.
Sometimes when we’re making love, I can’t help but think about our skeletons, foundations beneath flesh: the jutted pelvis, iliac crest, sculpted like a seashell. Your now-fleshy hands grasp the mantle of my hips— the skeletons, fibrous and calcified, will soon enough be stripped clean without the canvas of skin, red strip of muscle, the jellied yellow tissue. These woven bones, at last, shining naked. The hips, ribs, and skull—the inside finally out. The eye sockets emptied—no longer a lookout. Like the last page of a book, holding the air of already having seen. Emptied of recognition—emptied of this moment, this brief intermission of tension and delight, the silver orgasmic quiver of the almost already dead.
4.
My mother once told me her pain felt better only when she cried out—her groaning swelled to howl as the cancer ate away her vertebrae. When the pitch of her pain startled me, my own body betrayed me, too—I had to stifle a laugh. I understand the element of surprise can shake us into tears or to laughter, but still—there is no way not to burn with shame.
5.
When I cry out in pain in the small hours following the accident, you do not laugh. But you want me to stop. “I’m afraid the neighbors will think I’m beating you.” That makes me laugh, between my cries, even if it isn’t funny. My mother was right—the screaming gives the body its distraction. And also its metaphors: I tell you the pain is a shooting star—a hot, white, bolt ripping through skin and bone. It is the inside of a creature’s jaw, the crunch of locked fangs. You beg me to take the pain pills, but I refuse the dull throb, wanting instead the sharp truth of it—the involuntary breathless howl, present and primal—the laughter, orgasm, tears.
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Suzanne Roberts is the author of the award-winning travel essay collection Bad Tourist: Misadventures in Love and Travel and the award-winning memoir Almost Somewhere: Twenty-Eight Days on the John Muir Trail, as well as four books of poems. Her collection of lyrical essays, Animal Bodies: On Death, Desire, and Other Difficulties is forthcoming from the University of Nebraska Press in March 2022. Named “The Next Great Travel Writer” by National Geographic’s Traveler, Suzanne’s work has been listed as notable in Best American Essays and included in The Best Women’s Travel Writing. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, CNN, Creative Nonfiction, Brevity, and elsewhere. She holds a doctorate in literature and the environment from the University of Nevada-Reno and lives in South Lake Tahoe, California. For more information, visit her website: www.suzanneroberts.net
18 comments
Liza Porter says:
Sep 15, 2021
This is a painful, lovely piece, Suzanne. I hope you are okay up there near the lake. I wish I could send some of the beaucoup rain we got this summer in AZ.
Suzanne Roberts says:
Sep 15, 2021
Thank you so much. Firefighters did an amazing job.
Elizabeth Thomas says:
Sep 15, 2021
Feeling almost tongue-tied. So much I want to say. Simply lovely.
Suzanne Roberts says:
Sep 15, 2021
Thank you so much!
Britt Leach says:
Sep 15, 2021
Sharp truth of it? Give me a break. Sorry. Once again, it’s women, their courage. Your courage. Continuing, not a chance. My wife—you know her—never complains. It’s possible that any domicile has a complaint quotient, which I fill nicely. (Not nice at all.) Suzanne, you fill the moments, won’t let them go. Admirable courage, reflected in your writing. Must go. Dreadful itch, my little finger. Betamethasone diproprianate. To the rescue. Prescription.
Laurie Easter says:
Sep 16, 2021
This is stunning. So much beauty, truth, and pain. And this: “I do not say holding onto these losses scares me less than trying to let them go. I do not say the weight of them prevents me from floating away and disappearing. I do not say I am more alive—with pain yes, but alive—every time someone else I love has died.” I can totally relate.
Suzanne Roberts says:
Sep 25, 2021
Thank you!
Catherine says:
Sep 18, 2021
Bravo, Suzanne, once more into the breach with courage and conviction. Excellent piece!
Suzanne Roberts says:
Sep 25, 2021
Thank you
Judy says:
Sep 22, 2021
Amazing work! I had a class assignment to pick a piece from Brevity to discuss in class and I came across yours. I was immediately drawn and couldn’t resist sharing it with the class. I admire how you managed to intertwine pain and love and create something so beautiful!
Suzanne Roberts says:
Sep 25, 2021
Thank you for sharing it with your class!
Alexa says:
Sep 23, 2021
A wonderful piece of writing about pain. Many others can gather different things from this story, however, I got that pain is natural. We all experience it and we let it eat us inside. “You beg me to take the pain pills, but I refuse the dull throb, wanting instead the sharp truth of it—the involuntary breathless howl, present and primal—the laughter, orgasm, tears.” My favorite line. The sharp truth really spoke to me, as pain is something we all need to come to truth with. It hurts but we can only truly be better when we let it out.
Raequan Beal says:
Sep 23, 2021
Suzanne Roberts is left with brutal scars that she wishes to cover with joyful tattoos. Crying out to deal with the pain. The title “Bones & Skin” made me think differently about the story and felt it was a deeper meaning. Our bones are strong and solid but our skin is fragile and easily scarred. So even with the pain Suzanne was dealing with she stayed strong and continue to fight instead of being fragile. “The evidence of fracture, wound, fragility. The fine white light, the pucker of skin, the pink star where the bone broke free.” The accident left scars that brings so much pain and could’ve broke Suzanne but she dealt with the pain and managed to fight to stay alive.
Lisa Zimmerman says:
Sep 28, 2021
One of my CW students chose this essay to read for extra credit. It is so good, so filled with imagery, truth, pain, grief–oh! how fragile we are. How pain does remind us that we are alive to feel it.
Suzanne Roberts says:
Oct 13, 2021
Thank you for your kind words!
Dayton Marsh says:
Oct 13, 2021
The story had my mind wrapped around so many concepts. Making me realize that you never really know what people are going through. Then they come out with something like this you really see that it is deep and that they are handling it very well by addressing is at the source and using it to their advantage other then let it consumes themselves. Revealing the true strength of the person and how they are dealing with their problems in a positive way using all these feelings to create such a wonderful piece.
Heleet G Broza says:
Nov 23, 2021
Wow! It has been a while since a piece of writing has pierced heart, quickened my pulse and rattled my soul with the aching of familiarity and the owe of precision. .Thank you .Helit
Rahul Bakayala says:
Dec 18, 2021
I am crying again, again and again, heart tuching writing skill