essays by shé

Shift

I am biking from Venice to my job in Santa Monica as office manager for an animation studio. I am pedaling fast as usual, intent on the destination, not the journey.

It’s an old ten-speed, with lever gearshifts set below the handlebars. After gaining momentum, I shift up, and the lever breaks off. The piece still affixed to the bike plunges into my hand, between my right index finger and thumb. I look down, pull my hand off the shifter, and see white tendons staring back.

I don’t remember stopping. I don’t remember blood. But I remember calling my boyfriend from a payphone; he picked me up and took me to my mother’s house. The look on her face — not of concern, no; of disbelief that I was so upset. I wasn’t badly hurt: nothing broken, nothing severed. I didn’t even need stitches. She had trained in the army’s burn unit, and now worked with para- and quadriplegics, stroke victims.

But something shifted when the shifter impaled me. That’s not exactly right. Something shifted when I saw inside my body, when I saw my tendons. Reminder: mortality! Why am I walking around without a carapace? Anything could happen! It was the potential that shocked me. I saw clearly in that moment the miracle that so many bodies survive, day after day, when they can so easily – quickly! – go. It shook me to the core. Nobody understood my new perception, and I couldn’t seem to explain it. But I knew it was big news.

A right-handed writer, I adapted to the injury by holding pens between my index and middle fingers. It became a habit. The wound healed well; it was deep, but clean, and soon it didn’t even hurt. But the realization stayed. Skin can be penetrated so easily, so smoothly. We’re all just walking around lucky.

Now I know — thanks, John — that bodies are ephemeral, but the spirit is forever. Still, I will never forget seeing those beautiful white tendons, perfectly functional. They said, Listen up. Don’t wait to do exactly what you want, every single day.

"Spirit in the Sky" by Shé, 7" x 10" oil on paper, 2024
Spirit in the Sky by Shé, 7″ x 10″ oil on paper, 2024 (after Norman Greenbaum)

2 responses to “Shift”

  1. Jenelle Aubade Avatar

    Thank you, beautiful, so right.

  2. kelaw3d9d1d5ed2 Avatar
    kelaw3d9d1d5ed2

    Beautiful writing. And I read this while recovering from both a frozen shoulder and pulled hamstring–but, like in this piece, the tenuousness (expressed as pain, nearly always) puts one closer to what life actually is, and that’s a valuable thing.

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