Rescue

“Rescue” a poem

“Guilt feels like a weight on my chest,” says the physical therapist. “We are expected to above  and beyond our daily work with clients.

We are expected to research, contribute to scholarship,  earn grants – all on our own time.

There’s so much more that needs to be done, and I believe  everyone, regardless of background, should get the treatment they need.” However, with  stakes this high, burnout feels imminent. “On one hand,” she explained, “I am proud to be an  expert in a niche field, but on the other hand, I’m made to feel overworked and  underappreciated.”

She goes on to explain how many in her field love the work they do, and  want to help their client progress, but at what cost?

If this passion could translate into a dream  job away from physical therapy, the same love would arrive by running a dog rescue where  each animal heals and grows at its own pace, where they can roam together or swim alone in  peace.

 

Certified Listener Poet Avni Vyas

Practicum Poem

Summer 2023

 

Rescue

 

Isn’t greatness the ability to give 

above and beyond, beyond, and beyond? 

Isn’t the work we do the giving, 

despite its heaviness, 

despite one’s own needs which 

sit dense and tight like guilt? 

Isn’t that what greatness requires? 

Why else am I still going? 

It’s as if we’ve been told, 

there’s more to greatness than 

greatness. As if greatness is 

a pill we swallow every day, 

and a horizon stretching 

wider than it was yesterday, as if 

it all keeps expanding because 

we believe it to exist, believe its power 

with each grant, each patient, 

each course taught, each spark 

tamed into a light bulb 

expected to burn forever. 

But what if greatness is 

abandon, freedom? 

In some imaginary future, picture 

wide acres, dogs rescued and newly 

un-domesticated running in a pack, 

their freedom like Florida dust 

settled on their coats, paws callused 

and churning in a shallow pool 

where each creature howls an 

indulgent karaoke to the moon. 

How each good dog barks its good 

throat into good song, into good peace.