another poem about wounds
these days, i try not to write about division
how many more years than an abacus
the splitting goes
how the oldest sound is
hollow
how moving beads crack
together then apart
how i exist
marking years in deaths
in severance
you don't have to tell me
division is just a pretty word
for wound
we made this wound
you don't have to
tell me
how the oldest sound is
breaking
there, i said it.
parasitic
meeting you wasn't sweet
as blooming butterflies
flapping from my wrinkled husk
it was gunky cocoon of grub
bulging my belly despite brining
in bleach and gulping the bathwater
it was maggots latching to porky
innards and the doom of hatching
no matter how much i retched
meeting you was instant
parasitic itch of pickled infants
molting my youth with an oh
shit
this guy's gonna
make me
fly
little bird
and little one, the world you hold
won't remain so fantasy pure
as twigs and strings and dizzy birds.
those sparrow tunes turn sorrowful in time,
those crows take on a beauty blue
and the in-betweens of lovely and wrong
grow difficult to decipher, as you may too.
but in this moment your auburn locks
nest right atop your sing-song head
which will fill with sticks and stones and silly words.
and little one, the world you behold is brittle,
so hold it gently.
Father
"You rarely find a loon alone."
I wonder if you were concerned,
casting out the words I'd known
for years. Downhill the water ferned
its fingers round the only stone
thrown out by you back when I learned
you rarely find a loon alone.
I wonder if you were concerned
that day I came to you, all grown.
You, in your way, forgot years earned
and lost, left the stone unturned
and looked at me as if I'd flown.
You rarely find a loon alone.
Dusk, to Dawn
Remember mother forcing
those orange dresses
down over our halo hair
looking at us through the mirror
Remember rehearsing curtsies
spinning dances, simple hymns
chirrups of cardinals and hounds
singing in the night
Remember mother calling us
by the wrong names
sending us to separate rooms
when we corrected her