What you see before you
are the skin and clothes of the living
and my dead.
A result of generations of love
or hate
or boredom on a Tuesday night
and a potluck of chromosomes
The gene pool of my ancestors
drying up in my shallow end
Distilled into hereditary faults
that I forgive them for because they resulted in me.
I observe through my mother’s eyes
They show me that inaction causes stagnation
That stagnation causes resentment
That resentment causes a paralyzing fear
THAT fear festered rudely in my cradle
visited by vacationing cockroaches from upstairs
Unlike my one-eyed father, blindness is not mine.
My eyes are opened
when my mother reads me lies from a book of fairy tales
because I know that imaginary monsters aren’t real
That the real monsters look like people
they tend not to hide under my bed
instead, they sneak into my bed
a candy-colored catastrophic cruelty
Thieving my innocence,
Shackling me in guilt and shame
reinforcing that there is nowhere to hide
No closet is deep enough,
no blanket is tightly wrapped enough
No pillow will help my breath
Swaddling complacency
Nurturing tar black secrets
Forbidden by death
To verbally vomit
My truth abandoned in cobwebs
Chronological milestones
Amalgamated rubble
Duct taped together
Glued with lies, rejection,
Abandonment, and
A visceral faith that I was the broken one.
denunciation was not implanted
on those who blighted me.
Conversely, desperately
I believed.
I once had the courage to tell a student teacher
When I was 9 years old that I didn’t want to be a girl
I didn’t want to feel the way I was feeling anymore
I wanted to have the power of being something else
Because even then I knew that what I was,
WHO I was
Wasn’t like the other kids.
I had no lighthouse to guide my loose sailing
I had no anchor to throw over the side
To halt the rocking, storm-battered ship
That I’d been given to captain with no skills.
That teacher gently corrected me
to crash on the rocks instead
There was no safe harbor in which to moor
But…
There was something inside of me
A luminosity that crusaded for freedom
A light so obscured to me
by external destruction that I was blind to it
But I could feel it, warm in the darkness.
Growing exponentially with each fear abated
With each discovery excavated from shame
With each box opened, musty and dusty
The contents returned to owners
Who gave me their rejected anger,
shame and guilt disintegrated with antique fragility
I piled them up in the middle of the room
And I burned every bit of that judgement.
The fire rampaged uncontrolled
Scorching anyone who stood too close
Its flames reached unprecedented heights
With a destruction as violent as my life
Every step a new fire ignited
Every truth a testament
Every act defiant
No obstacle an impediment.
My raised fist declared my power
My resurrection burst forth from within
I am no longer defined by what was taken from me
But by what I bring with me to this world
What I create, nurture, give and receive
Is a reflection of that glorious light
I was destined to be.