Hal Sirowitz
A STRANGE NAME FOR HOPE
Azilect. What's in a name?
Plenty if your neurologist
prescribed it as the best hope
for slowing your Parkinson's.
If death is the only cure for life,
then give me more life. The good
thing about having Parkinson's is
you don't actually see your symptoms
becoming worst. You stay the same
until you drop to the next level. You
don't see yourself dropping. You only
see your attempts to stay where you were.
You become on friendlier terms with your
own death. Unlike Dylan Thomas' advice
in the poem to his father – "Rage against
the dying of the light" – you're not into raging.
You're curious how you'll react, like
a scientist using himself for the experiment.
Hal Sirowitz the author of four collections of poetry commencing with Mother
Said, followed by My Therapist Said (Crown). Fifteen years ago he was diagnosed
with early onset Parkinson's Disease. He has performed all over the world and on NPR's All Things
Considered and Fresh Air, MTV's Spoken Word Unplugged, and PBS's Poetry Heaven. He is in many anthologies, including Billy Collin's Poetry 180, and Garrison Keillor's Good Poems. He is a past poet laureate of Queens, New York. |