Inventor of the mammogram, who
made it possible—nay, required—
for anyone who owns them to get
their breasts mauled by
unforgiving steel. Men, of course,
invented this torture, going
back to Albert Solomon,
1913, first x-raying breasts,
and Raul LeBorgne, whom
we have to thank for the notion
of compressing them, which,
to give him a little credit,
raises the quality of images
and lowers radiation.
And wouldn’t you know that
a company called Siemens
developed the first machine,
whose descendants squish us now?
Doesn’t help when I know
I’ve been dodging the calls from
well-meaning women wanting to
schedule my biennial abuse, that
I just gotta pick up the phone,
knowing that it will result
in not one trip but at least
two, since my girls will require
ultrasound, too. But they
have to start in the masher,
bruised for weeks, though
I don’t say this to Lisa or Gina
or Carol, nor to Sue or Linda,
whose mammograms revealed
the worst, who lost breasts or
part of them or suffered worse.
My girls and I will live with
the bruises, in honor of
those who were saved—
however brutally—
in memory of those
who weren’t.













