Category Archives: poetry

What Life

 

What life, that was his answer, then.

And I knew just what he meant.                                 

Neither of us had much to lose.

But we knew, both of us knew,                   

one of us would hurt before the end

and broken hearts are hard to mend.

 

Oh, how easy it is to ignore

things like facts, and fear,

and common sense, when                        

kisses are like lightning storms

and pulses pound with such demand.

 

I am the way I have always been.

Am I? The way I’ve always been?

Maybe, this is who I was, before,

just a daughter, a mother, a wife.

(Until I wasn’t anymore.)

                                 

Or maybe that girl-child-woman                              

 broke into so many pieces

that even she will never find all of them.

Maybe she’s long gone and

you’re looking at the shell of a woman

who so selfishly survived.

 

Or, okay, maybe I’ve been fucked up since the day I was born!

The ‘when’ hardly matters when you

suddenly, somehow, find yourself whole.

If you can acknowledge the fucking travesty of living.

If you can remember the rhythm of your own heartbeat.

 

“Self-care” can, by definition, only be selfish.

Self-absorbed bitch, he named me, and he was right.

Because not killing myself takes all that I have.

I know my worth; I am a burden if anything at all.

But I will keep going, even if I have to crawl.

 

If I live selfishly, care for myself,

with this never-ending “self-care”

then I don’t want to die. Every day.

I can exist, I can just be without

fighting myself for my self.

                   

I can just

be without.

 

Maybe you don’t know the hopelessness

of a hopeless life.

If I’ve accidentally, finally, for now,

found a way to want a life?

What line would I not cross?

What rules would I not toss aside?

For the smallest chance to abide

inside my own mind and not mind?

 

I am no one’s happiness, I am no one’s home,

not even my own.

Still, I know

that any kind of “us”

even an “us for now”

will be time well spent.


Cottonmouth in the Dark

Translucent and paper-thin,
the current suit of skin whispers
across splinters--
bayonets of bone--
poised as if to pierce flesh.

But these overgrown bones
crumble
under pressure
and, bluff called, withdraw without drawing blood
leaving only bruises
like threats
blooming in black and blue.

When speaking clearly gets too hard,
my words stumble,
hung up on the hills and valleys
of the scars that carve
deep fissures into my tongue.

The widening gaps between my teeth
pinch pink lips
as if to say, "Bite your tongue"
or "Make a long story short"
suggestions I've heard many times before.

I'm always sorry
before I'm done speaking;
my apologies chase
the sentences I swallow
back down my throat.

Heavy-lidded eyes ache,
so dry they're going blind,
but my perspective changed with my vision--
maybe living in darkness,
I'll finally see?

As my voice and the light fade,
the surrounding silence grows
thick and weighty, like
the things I don't say
or the heavy words of men.

Names

Call me Shame.
Female: born to bear children, born to bear pain.

Stone me, burn me, imprison me with your name.

The world is yours, boy-a-mother-made.


Call me Shame.

Mother: bore man in birth, life, and death; nearly all her days.

Mother’s sons learn early where to lay their fists and where to place their blame.

“Whore” is only one of our names; heavy words for sons of mothers to say.





Call me SHAME.

Woman: bleeds to breed to bear to birth; a life lived in blood stains.

Sons of mothers born self-righteous, rapacious, knowing they’re owed all things.

Mothers, daughters, motherlands; all exist only to slake man’s thirst to claim.





Call me…Awake.

Call me cruel and mean and broken and insane.

Call me Fucking Bitch as you shoot me in the fucking face.

Call me Baby, ask me why I make you cause me pain.





For every time a woman bit her tongue to keep the peace,

For every time a woman suffered silently, and for every unheard scream,

For every time a woman carried the marks of some man’s rage,

For those reasons, and for 62 million more…

Yes. Oh, yes, we will name names.