Steven Schroeder | fighting shaped human hands

Fighting Shaped Human Hands
            –headline in JEB (highlighting key developments in The Journal of Experimental Biology)

They say the first joint of the index finger
is four times more rigid when supported by
the thumb, the force delivered through the fist
surface of the index and middle fingers
transmitted to the wrist through the meta
carpals doubled by the presence of a
buttressing thumb

            and all I want to know is how force is measured when
the question is why

the human hand evolved
short squat usable
as a weapon

while close cousins (sure to have been in just
as many fights given what we know of their disposition)
evolved long palms long fingers that curl to open

donuts. The force of the thumb
is not in doubt for anyone
who has ever been
called out

on a bases loaded full count
hoping for a grand slam.

I wonder if they measured
the force of the back of a soldier’s hand
square on the cheek of a captive bound before
the other is turned. I wonder if they
measured the force of the turn.

I wonder how many times
greater the force of the finger

pointing at the act, turning the gaze of a crowd to
injustice meant to be in shadows out of sight
out of mind – not the closed finger thumb
buttressed fist but turning eyes open.

And the force of fingers caressing, love
transmitted to the whole body from
their tips through every bone

casting out fear as perfect love
has been known to do. The hand
evolved for nothing, the way
the universe turns. It is

what it has done, what
it does, what it will
do. It is

the moon, not
the finger,

pointing.

from the moon, not the finger, pointing | 2015