小黄猫传媒

This content was published: May 18, 2022. Phone numbers, email addresses, and other information may have changed.

Two Deep Breaths: Power

By Caitlin Dwyer

I鈥檝e been thinking a lot about perfectionism lately. Around work and school, a lot of us suffer from the compulsion to appear flawless.

And yet, who is perfect? The world is full of melancholy and fever, and the work we do often damages us, even as it compels and thrills us. There are no 100% marks in life, no simple answers to the difficult questions of how far to push or when to stop striving.

鈥檚 poem 鈥淧ower鈥 is about these questions, and a lot more. She describes an excavation that unearths an old 鈥渢onic / for living on this earth,鈥 and we know immediately from the description that there is no such panacea. The world is difficult and demanding, and there鈥檚 no 鈥減erfect鈥undred-year-old / cure.鈥 We will have to learn to live with our wounds.

Rich finds an example of such wounding in the Nobel Prize-winning scientist Marie Curie, who discovered the element radium and died of radiation poisoning. Rich describes the illness Curie endured: cataracts, cracked skin. Her achievement made her 鈥渁 famous woman,鈥 conferring on her a kind of power.

This poem feels like a superhero story to me, but without a happy ending. A hero is irradiated, gaining special powers; but although she saves the world, she pays for it with her life. Rich is interested, I think, in the tension between wanting power, fame, that perfect ending 鈥 and the inevitable flip side, which is decay, change, and loss.

What I think is remarkable is how Rich invites and welcomes wounds. Instead of denying our hurts, as Curie did, Rich asks about the possibility of embracing what harms us, of even seeing it as necessary and formative. For a perfectionist, that kind of invitation is sweet indeed.

 

Power

 

Living聽聽聽 聽聽聽 in the earth-deposits聽聽聽 聽聽聽 of our history

 

Today a backhoe divulged聽聽聽 out of a crumbling flank of earth

one bottle聽聽聽 amber聽聽聽 聽聽聽 perfect聽聽聽 聽聽聽 a hundred-year-old

cure for fever聽聽聽 聽聽聽 or melancholy聽聽聽 聽聽聽 a tonic

for living on this earth聽聽聽 聽聽聽 in the winters of this climate

 

Today I was reading about Marie Curie:

she must have known she suffered聽聽聽 from radiation sickness

her body bombarded for years聽聽聽 by the element

she had purified

It seems she denied to the end

the source of the cataracts on her eyes

the cracked and suppurating skin聽聽聽 of her finger-ends

till she could no longer hold聽聽聽 a test-tube or a pencil

 

She died聽聽聽 a famous woman聽聽聽 denying

her wounds

denying

her wounds聽聽聽 came聽聽聽 from the same source as her power

 

Adrienne Rich was one of the 20th century鈥檚 most famous poets. She published many books, including Diving into the Wreck, which won the National Book Award. She was a queer feminist thinker, an intellectual, a poet, and an activist. She won a Lannan Lifetime Achievement Award, the Bollingen Prize, and a MacArthur grant, and was given the National Medal of Arts, which she refused to accept at the White House for political reasons.