HE COST OF DOING BUSINESS
I never knew how much a finger
mattered until I had to do without one.
Now, there’s nothing left to lick wet,
raise in the air, see which way wind is blowing.
I miss it for dialing on a touch tone phone,
picking up Planter’s salty peanuts
to complement an ice cold beer.
I can’t wag “Shame, shame on you”
when naughty brats defy their elders;
no other finger can compete for accuracy
picking your nose or digging wax out of an ear.
Dodging cold-blooded bullets under frozen stars,
ordered not to leave my post at Chosin Reservoir,
frostbitten hands could no longer hold my piece.
A medic led me to MASH 43 where a surgeon
lopped off my finger to save my hand.
A missing digit, a ticket home.
The VA’s compensating fifty bucks a month
keeps me in cigarettes and cheap wine,
but it’s tough trying to button a shirt or tie my shoes.
I need help feeling my way to my gal’s tender parts
igniting those subterranean fires.
I curse the stupidity of war!
Returning home to our Binghamton farm
I blend right in with farming neighbors
with missing fingers lost untangling
a snagged bush-hog backhoe,
plugged-up combine or Kubota loader.
Taciturn men who rarely complain mutter:
“It’s the cost of doing business.”