Sniff

When my father failed

at frying an egg

on the occupational therapy stove,

 

forgetting to press in the knob

before turning it to medium-high,

 

then cracking the shell

too hard on the skillet’s rim

so half the white

dribbled down the outside

and onto the burner,

 

then struggling to reach a plate

from the nearby cupboard

on account of the plastic tubes

coiling out of his kidneys,

 

the pouches of urine

velcroed to his hips

like pistols in a holster,

 

the social worker suggested

he be discharged to a sniff

instead of going home.

 

And when I looked puzzled,

she clarified a sniff

is a skilled nursing facility,

commonly abbreviated

S-N-F, or sniff.

 

Sniff, I repeated, my mind

pondering that acronym

turned onomatopoeia

 

for the sound we make

to clear tears from our noses,

 

or the method by which

we detect the smell

of something suddenly burning.


Doug Fritock is a writer, husband, and father of 4, who was born and raised in the suburbs of Philadelphia, but now lives in Redondo Beach, California. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in Rattle, Prime Number Magazine, and Whale Road Review among others. He is an active member of Maya C. Popa’s Conscious Writers Collective.