Corkboard Wings
I am six and too young to know better,
all laughter and curiosity and youth,
balancing on my tip-toes as chubby fingers grasp
at the wooden box on a bookshelf,
gazing in awe at the butterfly tucked within.
I am eleven when I open that box again
all cartwheel and sticky summer smile-
a smile that fades when I see the pins.
Needles thrust through my butterfly,
crucifying those gentle wings to a corkboard cross.
I am fifteen when the butterfly's corpse is moved to my bedside table,
and at night I whisper to the box's macabre contents.
We are the same, you and I,
all pins and pain and appearances.
And as I walk out the door I pin up my smile-
for what am I if not a decoration in this box we call Earth?
I am twenty when I throw the box to the ground,
all freedom and broken glass and rage.
There are holes in my wings,
stiff from being pinned to corkboard for too long,
and a dull grey has replaced the blue.
But my worth is not defined by the color of my wings
and one day
I will fly.