The Cracks
When I was younger and struggling with trauma,
All I wanted was for my father to
Check me into a mental health facility
So I could look at everyone else and go
I'm not the crazy one here.
But maybe crazy is in the cracks of my fourth grader voice
When I sang the same Tim McGraw song in front of the class
Every day for a year, hoping my classmates would sing my praises
And forget that I was weird, or forgive me for 180 days of country music.
Maybe crazy is in the cracks of memories
I altered to make a better story.
Maybe crazy is in the cracks
Of my skin when I rub it raw.
Maybe crazy is in the cracks in my energy when I don't eat for three weeks
To see if anyone compliments my weight loss
Or asks if I'm okay, like a check up
That doesn't come with a $30 co-pay.
Maybe crazy is the cracks in my logic
When I say I've romanticized my mental illness
Because of the attention I get for being different
Even though being different hurts to think about too.
Maybe crazy is what hold my fragments together;
Gorilla glue to my porcelain.
Obvious, yet effective.
Not making me perfect, but making me whole.