Doctor Klitsov
there I was, sprawled in the dim light of my room, bottle half-empty on the floor, the drink going hot through me, and I thought of Doctor Klitsov in the East End, his little practice with the cracked linoleum and the waiting room that smelled of old magazines and fear.
I saw those posters on his walls again, faded and curling at the edges, torn like they’d been through the war — the perfect picket-fence families grinning wide with teeth like piano keys, munching carrots like happy rabbits in a field, brushing and flossing the way god intended, shining bright in the promised land of oral hygiene.
that was a long time ago.
now, in the empty years without those visits, without the nerve to go back, the teeth go brittle, crack and crumble like old pavement in the rain, fillings pop out and shatter into black dust, and the holes become traps, little dark pockets where chunks of meat lodge and rot, festering in the warm wet dark, places no floss can reach and no prayer can clean, just breeding grounds for the pain that’s coming, the pain that’s already here.
Christ, the thought of it hits me now, drunk and shaking — the way he leans in close with that steel pin in his hand, pushes it gentle-like into the nerve, and then the switch flips, the drill whines alive, that high screaming whine like a demon waking, and it starts its long journey down, down, down, boring through the bone toward the rotten core of me.
God help me in this condition, this river I’m going down in, this fear that grips my gut like ice, the chair and the light and the mask and the rabbits on the wall — and that’s why I’ll never go back, never, to Doctor Klitsov and his rabbits, his posters, his drill that sings the song of hell straight into my skull.
just one more drink, and maybe the pain will sleep a little longer.
receding gum line,
remember, call the clinic,
addiction hotline















