Sunday, November 18, 2007

When people describe Something (war, architecture or poverty) as a ‘scar across the landscape’, I don’t think they mean that Something (war, architecture or poverty) was black, scabby, bruised and held together with bloodstained strips of adhesive.

I’ve been looking at my scar, my wound, for the past three days. I take a little silver hand mirror and put it on the sink. Then I pull up my shirt, pull down my pants and, holding up my belly a little, I lightly touch the bruised skin above the scar. It looks like my skin has turned into a smashed plum. The scar slashes across the top of my pudenda; it’s about 3 or 4 inches long. The scar is the ugliest, grossest thing I’ve ever seen on my body.

A few days before the surgery, I thought of the virginal way I think about my body. By ‘virginal’ I mean that I hold my body aggressively to myself. Thinking of my body as ‘virgin’ has nothing to do with sex or chastity. I don’t know how to explain it; I just think of my body as mine. It is inviolate; it is whole; it is the same as it has always been; it has all its original parts; it is not shared by anyone or anything. No flag has been planted on it, by marriage or motherhood.

But this surgery, as minor as it was, has changed my body’s landscape.
Where there was previously nothing, now there waves a tiny white flag with a red cross on it.

2 comments:

bitchphd said...

The scar will probably fade to the point of near-invisibility, at least if it's anything like a c-section scar. Hopefully you won't be as chickenshit as I was--the doc told me to take the tape off myself in a few days, but I refused and left it on until my six-week checkup because AHHH NOT GOING TO UNTAPE A BIG CUT IN MY ABDOMEN THANK YOU ANYWAY.

Delia Christina said...

yeah. i'm supposed to take the tape off next week. is it too much to hope that the adhesive strips just magically remove themselves?

i think it's exactly like a c-section scar. they kept looking at it, saying 'oh, that's not so big' and all i can see is a big threaded grin when i look down at myself. it looks huge.