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I Would Leave Me If I Could: A Collection of Poetry




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  For my mother—

  My favorite writing I’ve ever read will always be the pages of your journal I used to sneak into my room late at night. I only ever wanted to grow up and love with such a passion as you did.

  For Professor Bradford—

  I loved writing in your class so much that I dropped out to go love it intensely.

  And for the fans—

  My capacity to feel has been stretched and molded with each piece of your souls that you reveal to me. I offer this in return.

  INTRODUCTION

  I’ve been looking for a place to put these pieces.

  For 25 years I have flipped spastically

  from FM to AM inside my head.

  I am, still,

  unaffected by the abrupt static punching through my ears.

  I don’t mind riding along to fragments and pieces

  of the different stations.

  I don’t mind the indecision of a Motown record

  spearheaded by a metal guitar solo.

  The classical arpeggio climaxing

  into the blue balls of worship music.

  You know the sound, right?

  An indecisive radio?

  I have found a home here amongst the chaos.

  The constant.

  Every morning the muse puts her finger in my nose.

  One, then two.

  Sliding into me

  pornographically.

  She stretches my nostrils wide

  until her slimy hand crawls past my deviated septum,

  in between my eyes,

  and into my brain.

  Exploding into a fist

  when she reaches the cavity behind my temples.

  The muse is bratty.

  She is smug.

  She wiggles her fingers around defiantly.

  She displays her palm expectantly,

  waiting for a present I will drop into it.

  She brushes and tickles the walls of my skull.

  The muse is a flirt.

  She’ll always tease but never put out.

  Fucking bitch.

  I so badly want to be liked.

  Scratch that.

  I want to be loved.

  I want her to love me.

  Scratch that.

  I want her to leave.

  I want her to scratch that.

  Scratch that itchy itch of my swollen brain.

  It’s only awful ’cause the muse looks just like me.

  Dirty fingernails and gummy smile.

  But she sparkles the way only a beautiful woman can.

  A beautiful woman is a car crash.

  Shiny asphalt and smoking rubber.

  Melted plastic and metal edges.

  Glimmering glass shrapnel iridescence

  scattered across the road.

  Haphazard beauty. Dignified and slightly terrifying.

  The car radio flips from AM to FM.

  The doors are locked and I’m trapped inside. My head bobs against the airbag.

  It’s calming. Like a mother’s bosom. I would imagine, at least.

  My mother was full-breasted. But loudmouthed, and sarcastic, and raised her babies out of our colic with camaraderie.

  She didn’t hold me close to the muffled beating of her heart beneath a department-store sweater.

  She didn’t breastfeed.

  The nature and nurture in my sternum are arguing now.

  My shoulders are held together by two rubber bands pulled tight in a schoolboy’s hands.

  Sometimes I feel like my spine will unfold and explode like a jack-in-the-box doll.

  I can’t carry all this weight, so I must put it somewhere and somewhere is with you.

  You will take good care of it?

  I want to walk away from my bones and set them down on a counter like my keys after work.

  Let my skin sink into the armchair and lose its shape. Lose its form. Collapse into a sigh.

  I see all things in this world as more beautiful than I, and I spin the details of their atoms in every paragraph and brushstroke.

  I wish I had 11 hands with 55 fingers so I could paint and write and fuck and feed and grab grab grab everything.

  I. Want. It. All.

  It must be mine.

  I want to walk away from the burgundy bags under my eyes and the periwinkle veins in my hands.

  I hope you’ll stay.

  I hope you’ll stay.

  But I would leave me too, if I could.

  DUE DATE

  I was born 5 weeks early.

  I couldn’t wait

  to join the rest of the world,

  and that is

  exactly

  the moment

  my enthusiasm ceased.

  The nurses tried to take me so my

  “mother could sleep.”

  But she refused to let me go.

  I’m sure ultimately,

  I ended up

  in a common room for newborns.

  And I’m sure ultimately,

  I lay there comparing myself to the other babies.

  Wondering if I were as smart as they were.

  Or as funny.

  Or as beautiful.

  The average baby weighs 8 pounds.

  I weighed 5.

  The average baby is 20 inches long.

  I was 14.

  And it was on my first day on Earth

  that I realized I didn’t measure up,

  and I never would.

  I WANT TO BE A WRITER!

  It is not a want.

  It is not a wish.

  It’s simple.

  A demon waiting

  at the foot of your bed

  to grab your ankles while you sleep.

  It’s a gnat burrowing into your ear

  and laying eggs behind the socket of your eye.

  It’s sitting in your own filth for days,

  staring at the shower across the room

  while minutes become hours.

  It’s six months since you’ve talked to your dad,

  And whining like an infant to your lover

  begging to be spit-shined

  like a piece of silverware,

  “I have given so much to the page,

  please tell me I am not worthless.”

  It is not a desire.

  It is a clenched jaw and an aching back and a disposition to spite everything around you.

  To find the world not worthy of your words,

  and to find yourself unworthy of the world.

  It is towering arrogance that says,

  “Let these passages be free

  in an existence that will cherish and worship them.”

  It is a terrible self-loathing

  that sends your teeth sinking into your lips.

  It’s a gut pushed out

  and shoulders slumped

  and a sneaking suspicion

  that everything you see is altered through your gaze.

  They cry,

  “But I WANT to be a writer!”

  And my head hangs.

  You are asking to be shot square in the head.

  You know not what you seek.

  You ask for bleeding brains

  and carnage t
hat stains your pillowcase.

  You ask for jelly

  in the place of the cartilage in your spine.

  You ask for kindness that is never returned.

  You wish to burn alive

  in the flame of a love unrequited.

  It’s simple.

  Write.

  HOMEMAKER

  listen to that

  cool

  cool

  water run

  never been good at being alone

  say “hello holy father.

  where’s your daughter?

  she could make this house a home.”

  you got a

  new

  new

  closet

  never been good at savin’ cash.

  chrome on the faucet

  and you bossed it.

  i’ve never seen you on the counter before.

  listen to that

  cold

  cold

  winter blow

  never had time for absolutes.

  new steam shower

  for the powder.

  his-and-her sinks

  but

  just

  for

  you.

  you got a brand-new bedroom.

  a clean set of sheets I’ve never seen.

  thread count’s pricey,

  for your wifey.

  i know she don’t make the bed like me.

  never seen a Persian rug look so homely

  never heard a sadder voice

  than when you phone me.

  are you lonely?

  you said it’s time for some renovations.

  time for conversation.

  but I flipped houses

  bigger than you before.

  enjoy the silence

  in your kitchen.

  been watering all these plants

  made of plastic

  and you think they’ll grow.

  homemaker.

  shiny new things but they’re all for show.

  SUMMER FRUIT

  I spent springs and summers

  as a child

  eating the fruit from a watermelon.

  Grainy sugar bites

  and juice slick up my cheeks

  like a Chelsea smile.

  My mother used to warn me

  if I swallowed a seed

  it would get stuck in my belly

  and grow a watermelon plant.

  My stomach would expand

  till I’d combust.

  I always spit them out

  in horror.

  I spent a spring and summer

  eating the fruit

  from the flesh of your lips.

  The bounty of two round mounds,

  hard like pink sugar.

  Your grip on my cheeks

  with a firm hand

  holding my mouth open.

  To drop seeds into my belly.

  To spit a virus in my throat

  that grew into a giant “you” plant.

  The branches

  crawling up the walls of my insides

  and begging

  to claw my mouth open

  and make me say things I don’t mean.

  The dying leaves

  flaking off

  and swaying to the pit of my stomach

  in an imaginary breeze

  landing with a deafening thump.

  Echoes that bounce up between my teeth.

  And remind my tongue there is no more watermelon.

  Just empty space.

  YOU WERE FIRST

  So many men who came before you

  So many women, one-night stands

  I guess I found it easier

  For me to charm a man

  ’Cause a woman always crumbled in my hands.

  Could only act on what I knew.

  Was raised to earn it that way too.

  I guess I found it easier

  to split men at the seams

  At least that’s what I learned in magazines.

  All this

  soft skin, soft eyes

  All these

  Beautiful laughs and beautiful thighs

  Always kept me up at night

  The truth is I was terrified.

  Pink lips, warm curves

  All these

  Wonderful aching shaking nerves

  Heart like it’s about to burst

  The truth is you were first.

  I AM ANGRY BECAUSE OF MY FATHER

  I am angry because of my father.

  Because he would come home

  Wrinkled from work,

  And slam the door so hard

  the house would shiver.

  I am angry because of my father.

  Because his furrowed brow

  Repeats itself in my Punnett square

  And opens the curtains

  On my forehead.

  I am angry because of my father.

  I can hold a grudge like it’s a hand.

  I throw my watch on my nightstand.

  I am a worthless smudge

  On the floor, in the rug

  In the kingdom of the almighty

  God who will judge

  Me as hard as She can,

  ’Cause I won’t love a man

  Unless he is angry

  Because of my father.

  LAYERS

  Thank you

  for stumbling

  across the universe

  with your confident swagger

  and tripping right into my lap.

  Wild hair spilling across your eyelids

  and nestling into my mouth

  with my kiss on your forehead.

  Thank you for the freckles on your nose

  that keep me

  star-crossed,

  starry-eyed,

  and then cross-eyed

  when I’m lying underneath you

  and I look up at your darling face.

  You’re made of everything good in this world.

  Syrup-sweet and paining my teeth

  dripping from my lips

  like honey

  from the bees buzzing in my head

  driving me crazy, daily,

  with the sounds of your voice

  echoing through my skull

  and the halls of my house

  still ringing

  from the last time you were here,

  the last time it was a home.

  Thank you for warming the industrial gray

  of my concrete foundation

  and turning my bones

  from cement blocks

  to rich mahogany wood.

  Layers.

  INVENTORY

  He told me

  about the women

  he had slept with

  when we were apart.

  He was honest.

  And I had asked for it.

  He told me stories

  decorated with leather

  and violence

  and anal.

  Girls

  who relaxed in sweet drunken smiles

  and enveloped him in warmth.

  Lazily tumbling

  through bedsheets,

  glowing in the acid hue

  of the outside lights.

  Girls

  who wouldn’t ask him

  to pick up his dirty socks.

  Or turn away from him

  on a shared mattress.

  Girls

  who weren’t sad and tired.

  Girls

  better than me.

  Who had learned to turn their trauma

  into adventures

  for him to stumble blindly through.

  Instead of wallowing

  in their brokenness

  and breaking everything

  in their path

  as penance.

  BATTLES

  Been biting my tongue till it bleeds

  cry over things I don’t need.

 
My mother told me

  pick your battles wisely

  but you made me angry

  at the world

  so I chose them all.

  MEMORIZE

  I’m a boyish

  mess.

  A boasting contest

  with an inferiority

  complex.

  I can’t make friends.

  I’ve got an

  eager desperation

  to be up on

  “what’s next.”

  I have too much

  sex.

  I say it’s ’cause

  I’m anxious

  and I’m

  overly stressed.

  I can’t take blame.

  I funnel through

  liquor

  and spit up my pain.

  I’m no good

  with fame.

  There’s a love/hate

  relationship

  with noise

  in my brain.

  Except

  for when

  you speak my name.

  Because you take it in vain.

  (Take it in vein!)

  I could fall asleep

  here.

  Crawl inside

  the sleeping bags

  under your eyes.

  But I stay

  awake

  to memorize.

  STOCKHOLM SYNDROME PT. 1

  I remember

  how the sky looked.

  Your lips made my mouth numb.

  Your face

  grew closer to her neck.

  It’s easy to play dumb.

  I remember

  all the chaos.

  The frantic, nervous sounds.

  I don’t remember much,

  though,

  once I hit the ground.

  Everything went black.

  Everything got cold.

  I’m standing

  on a sidewalk,

  screaming,

  “Over my dead body!”

  I remember

  tender spiderwebs.

  All violet,

  yellow,

  blue.

  It seems with one eye open,

  still all I see is you.

  I guess there was no casualty

  that could make you refuse.

  I hide

  behind a strangled mind.

  You tell me,

  “Winners never lose.”

  A hostage situation.

  I know I should,

  but I can’t leave

  you

  all alone

  somewhere.

  I know you don’t,

  but I still care.

  This Stockholm syndrome

  might just be the death of me.

  WISH YOU THE BEST

  I hope every single day you put your socks on backward