“Do you have thoughts of harming yourself?”
with thanks to Joel, Shelby, Kim, and Hiwot
for their care
“Harmed, what is left
but our belief in future harm?”
—Cassandra J. Bruner
The ER nurse asks me if I want to harm
myself. I am honest. Honestly, I did not plan
to spend the day in a hospital. Though I
did. Brought a backpack just in case.
I tell them that, as a kid, I had to see
a cardiologist, yearly. My big, leaky heart
up on the screen. I grew into my heart,
though. The hole closed. I think it’s harmless
now. More questions. Then time to see
the PA. She asks me if I have a plan
to kill myself. A day in mind, if I
have picked a method. Says my case
will be evaluated by a psychiatrist. In case
I need to stay. If I’m not safe. My heart
rate is checked again, breath, pressure. I’m
asked by the psychiatrist if I want to harm
myself. How. When. Do I have a plan
for committing, if so I should be committed, see
a second psychiatrist. Will also be seen
by another doctor. She builds a compelling case.
I agree to stay. To work on a plan
toward recovery. She spoke like a heart-to-heart.
Upstairs the nurse asks if I want to harm
myself. They station someone at the door, in case I
try something. The doctor asks if I
want to harm myself. Except the bathroom, they see
my every move, so that I don’t harm
myself.
I interject:
I ask when the psychiatrist plans
to see me. They aren’t sure. The new nurse asks
if I want to harm myself. The doctor asked how long I’d
wanted to harm myself. Do I still want to die?
Do I still feel like— … have feelings of—
Do I want to— How long have I wanted to—
I say I say I can’t keep repeating
this conversation, this is the sixth time
today. I’m told it’s to keep me
safe. I do not feel safe. I say
it doesn’t make me feel safe.
There’s always someone watching
at the door. The next nurse says
I know you don’t want to talk
about this, but—
When I take
a shit they knock to check on me. To make sure
I’m not—
to make sure I’m safe.
All the while I’m hoping
this hospital is on my insurance
plan. I stayed because I wanted
to but not because I wanted to.
The new psychiatrist asks
about me wanting to harm
myself. About how I’ve wanted
to die. Do I feel
that way now, did I have
a plan, if I go home
will I be safe, be safe,
not harm
myself. Be safe. Someone
keeps watch from outside the door.
The psychiatrist asks
if I have access
to a gun but not if I have access
to a support system. I tell him
it’s not that I want
to die
it’s more like I’m not sure I want
to live. The distinction
feels important. We talk and I’m in a gown
I can’t get to stay closed in the back,
unable to turn my head
because of how I slept in this bed
while locked alone in this room like a safe.
I imagine a safe place for my now-healthy heart to beat without a plan,
where I can un-language the harm and set it in a safe-locked case,
a physical place where I can see it, can kill it, where I
am not a checklist of answers—
They use
my birthday to confirm it’s me,
ask me if I know
where I am
when the meds make me fuzzy. They want
me to be safe. I only remember
one person calling me
my name.
Marlin M. Jenkins (@MMicahJenkins) was born and raised in Detroit and currently lives in Minnesota. The author of the poetry chapbook Capable Monsters (Bull City Press, 2020) and a graduate of University of Michigan’s MFA program, his work has found homes with Indiana Review, The Rumpus, Waxwing, and Kenyon Review Online, among others. You can find him online at marlinmjenkins.com.