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Needles To Say

An Ode To My Chiropractor

By Addison AlderPublished 8 months ago 1 min read
Pins and needles for my pins and needles. (Image by MidJourney)

She doesn’t take pleasure in my pain.

It’s just her professional domain.

The opportunity for brutality

is an occupational reality.

My crick-crack chiropractic.

Not cruel, just pragmatic.

Our vertebral spoken contract:

to realign my spinal tract.

*

At first I was cynical,

but she was clinical.

So I held my reservations,

during her evaluations.

*

Now she begins

her ministrations,

with analogue-digital

manipulations.

Crunch.

Creak.

My backbone speaks back.

A spinal pretzel,

dry and salty,

a twisting, crinkled multipack.

*

She’s slipping my compacted discs

skipping them from track to track.

Crick-crack.

Snik-snak.

Punctuating our sessions,

with her onomatopoetry,

my vertebrae, a query mark,

part apostrophe, all catastrophe.

And there, beneath thoracic rubble,

lies last year’s drunken tumble,

this year’s bedroom renovation,

and Tuesday’s bike lane altercation.

*

With the laying on of hands,

my spinal column she commands:

correcting my impious posture,

straightening my wayward stance.

*

But now she wants to needle me,

steely, drily,

intra-spinally.

Fine filaments penetrate,

twisting tips into my ache.

I do not count among my likes,

being transfixed by metal spikes.

But the problem bespeaks its own solution:

pins and needles for my pins and needles.

*

Then she completes me

with her finishing moves:

Pop.

Snap.

CLIMACTIC KERRRUNCH

(Is it bad I screamed?)

*

Finally she cracked it:

solved my coccyx acrostic.

Then applying verbal analgesic,

(“mmm that was a good one”)

with grim but courteous pleasantry.

I thank her for her efficiency

in tackling my deficiency.

*

As soon as I am able,

I liquefy off her table,

part jellyfish, part puppet,

fully disarticulate.

*

Gingerly I find my feet,

hunching, bowed, and in defeat,

she takes my payment with a grin,

"See you again!"

"Twice weekly,"

I nod meekly,

because—needless to say—

I’ll be back.

For FunGratitudehumorhow to

About the Creator

Addison Alder

Writer of Wrongs. Discontent Creator. Editor of The Gristle.

100% organic fiction 👋🏻 hand-wrought in London, UK 🇬🇧

🌐 Linktr.ee, ✨ Medium ✨, BlueSky, Insta

💸 GODLESS, Amazon, Patreon

Reader insights

Outstanding

Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!

Top insights

  1. Compelling and original writing

    Creative use of language & vocab

  2. Excellent storytelling

    Original narrative & well developed characters

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Comments (6)

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  • Paul Stewart3 months ago

    As a lifelong cynic of chiropractors, you have me changing my mind, like DK you made ti sound almost adventurous, a little sensual. And I loved all the puns and rhymes. Forgot how good you are at that, sir. You've been missed round here. Also - Hi, hope you are well? Wanted to remind you of the book and ask you to look at the most recent piece and update on progress and the next step involving your input - a bio. Thanks. https://shopping-feedback.today/writers/vocal-poetry-anthology-progress-update-and-requests-part-two%3C/span%3E%3C/span%3E%3C/span%3E%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3Cstyle data-emotion-css="w4qknv-Replies">.css-w4qknv-Replies{display:grid;gap:1.5rem;}

  • D.K. Shepard8 months ago

    Gosh this is so clever and funny!! I've never been to a chiropractor before but you made the experience sound like an adventure worth taking

  • Sandy Gillman8 months ago

    Ouch this sounds painful! I've always been cynical of chiropractors myself, but everyone I know who's been to one swears by them!

  • Dalma Ubitz8 months ago

    There were so many puns and intelligent humorous lines, I'm afraid I missed some! Wow, what a fun, incredible poem. I've been watching Two and a Half Men. With the character Alan being a chiropractor in the sitcom, this made me chuckle, thinking that one of his patients would write something like this for him.

  • Caroline Craven8 months ago

    Ha! Fab last line! Gosh I felt every crick and crack, snick and snack of this! Hope your back is doing better! Great poem.

  • Ah, such sweet torture!

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