
"Push down," he said.
"Push down." Beneath the other.
"Try that side again, hard as you can."
In the mirror, he showed me how my right shoulder was higher than my left, how my head was at a lean, my hips tilted.
"You have scoliosis," he said, "and a pinched nerve. The vertebrae in your neck are locked, except for one joint, which is wobbly. Every time you do your neck exercises, you make it wobblier. Don't feel guilty. These problems developed in childhood. But you need to stop the yoga."
Yoga was a reach. I took a class at Gardenview, the old person's home on the corner, three times a week. Mostly, we hung from the waist, and shoulder circled, and child posed. None of the rooms overlooked a garden. Half of them overlooked the carpark; the dining room we used for yoga, tables pushed against the wall, overlooked the main road. Old person's home was another misnomer. There were two young men sat in front of the TV every day, one twitching, one completely still. There was a third who never seemed to leave his room, but I'd spied him through the open door, bedside table a plastic skyline, empty cups stacked into towers. Then there was Hanny, the girl who came to class every week in her pink flannel pyjamas. One nurse, the nurse with the mole, always apologised. "She didn't want to change today."
At night, I could feel my ribs shifting like tectonic plates as I tried to get comfortable. I felt the familiar earthquake where they met.
"Tell me if it hurts," he said.
It did, but it was good pain.
"I'm loosening up these muscles here," he said, palm against my left shoulder blade. "Every time they've torn, they've healed again, tighter. That's why your spine is curved. Were you in a car accident as a child?"
"No," I said, "my Mum didn't drive."
"Fall out of a tree? Beaten by siblings?"
"Something like that."
Denne historien er fra January 14-20 2023-utgaven av New Zealand Listener.
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Denne historien er fra January 14-20 2023-utgaven av New Zealand Listener.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på

A hint of mermaids
Erin Palmisano's latest novel once again has food and romance at the heart of its well-plotted story.

Execution over innovation
Big and bold ideas are fine, but being the best beats being first.

Something's wrong with all of them
Engaging dissection of the 20th-century novel likely to send the reader in search for the book under discussion.

Cell warfare
A NZ trial using immunotherapy to beat a form of blood cancer is expanding after promising results – and it's hoped the 'gold standard' treatment will soon be widely available.

The virus that stole all the smells
In this edited extract from The Forgotten Sense, Jonas Olofsson traces the rise in anosmia as a result of Covid-19 infections.

When caring is ‘woke'
Some years ago, I sat in a small plane circling over Punta del Este in Uruguay. There was a delay and we sat in tense silence until we began our descent. Outside the tiny airport, a taxi ferried us past private Lear jets; these had been the cause of the hold-up. The driver pointed to two planes side by side. \"This one is a Trump plane.\"

Getting along swimmingly
The presenters of Endangered Species Aotearoa spend a fair bit of time on and in the water in the second season.

That clingy feeling
Our pets display the same types of attachment behaviours as we do, or so it seems.

The famous furred
A peaceful little spot in LA is the final resting place for the pets of some of Hollywood's biggest names.

Gone girl
She wandered in on Thursday morning looking very wan, and climbed into her bed. I sat on the edge and stroked her back.