Mississippi Appendectomy
In 1961, without Fannie Lou Hamer’s knowledge or consent, she was given a hysterectomy while in the hospital for minor surgery, a procedure so common it was known as a “Mississippi appendectomy.”1
Honey doused anger
what you. took.
draws blood if you not careful
I scream in whispers
and hives of bees pour out my mouth
for what’s missing
The buzzing never done stopped
Across cotton fields of hardened white buds
Where there were once flowers
That toughened up tender hands
In that space
Where there once was
A universe is passing
Me like cotton
When cotton is ready
To be picked
The flowers wilt and fall
Leaving nothing but a hard brown boll
That cracks open its shell to soft white fluff
This. my. Our. body.
Becomes rough like the
roots of hydrangea trees
Filled with gnats and fruit flies
The sign of a devil nearby
Spiny talons protected
dollops of white dewy cotton
A space where love will never grow
Where you. I. Never grow
This. my. Our. body.
swollen from the emptiness
In that space, a universe is passing
1961 becomes now
Like my fingers reaching into the cotton boll
The gnarled knotty fists
Reaching backward into the new
Of Miss…isss…sippp…eee
Pound my. Our. This spirit down
Into the hollow
You took
Pinched like Mississippi cotton
You took the cotton
twisting up inside me
But I wasn’t ready
I was not.
I was
To be picked
Like flowers
Bees pour out my mouth
To suckle at the breasts of
Lilacs and Black-eyed Susans
Nibbling first at one then at another
In this flower garden
I could taste the afterbirth
of the loss
Like a laying on of the hands –
Fannie Lou Hamer hands
Not doctors
That pinched cotton
From black brown yellow
Bodies free from bondage but
Still for profit
Came out missing
What you know about eyes
Flecked with sprinkles of joy?
Teared, missing the small kisses
Falling on my neck like a
breeze heavy with ocean
Instead of babies
I birthed
My anger
Half carried and half dragged
My body.
From barren lands
Tubes tied
Like the roots of oaks and pines
Sisters, Mothers, Wives
Trying to make something
From this wood.
Cite this article: Heather Lynn Johnson, “Mississippi Appendectomy,” in “Exploring Indisposability: The Entanglements of Crip Art,” Colloquium, Panorama: Journal of the Association of Historians of American Art 8, no. 1 (Spring 2022), https://doi.org/10.24926/24716839.13271.
PDF: Johnson, Mississippi Appendectomy
Notes
- Rosalind Early, “The Sweat and Blood of Fannie Lou Hamer: How a Would-be Voter Became a Civil Rights Legend,” HUMANITIES: The Magazine of the National Endowment for the Humanities 41, no. 1 (Winter 2021), https://www.neh.gov/article/sweat-and-blood-fannie-lou-hamer. ↵
About the Author(s): Heather Lynn Johnson is an artist and poet.