Coarse black horse hair
stems between my breasts;
a symptom with an easy cure.
24 Poems ~ 24 Hours
I'm the author of Today, She Is (Wipf & Stock, 2014), editor of The Atelier Project (CreateSpace, 2015), and editor of the blog Paper Mill. My poetry and stories have appeared in places including Ink, Sweat & Tears, Quailbellmagazine.com and The Wayfarer (forthcoming). I have an MLitt in Creative Writing from the University of Glasgow; I love northwest coasts and the magic of creativity.
Coarse black horse hair
stems between my breasts;
a symptom with an easy cure.
T he
L ast
P air cas
C aded in a blue
G littered velvet vamp that
M ade my chunky shins look like Cat Woman’s.
I
carried
the barefoot
while I hobbled
and cast them in the closet with the others
That I will not wear again, the leather
Kitten heels and cork pumps, the stiletto boots that kill my back.
I
M iss
T hem and
I still feel
Them In the bone
M arrow of my hurting soles.
My skeleton in the closet
Circled through my mind through
Every first glass of wine
And every first kiss.
When do I tell him?
First or second or third date became never
Until the relationship faltered and jolted
Because he sensed trust issues and maybe something more
Leaning on his shoulder the scars
Of harassment and injury slipped
By easily enough but not the misdiagnosis
of bipolar or the panic I feel
when a clump of hair falls out
or even the innocent
fact that my body cannibalizes its own muscle
and my energy is a ticking grenade
wearing thin
Or the real diagnosis of
Future diabetes and improbable children…
No, I think that will wait.
“Commitment to self is the longest commitment of all.”
Heres to the girl who no one can figure out
The girl that I don’t know
The girl who’s always higher
Than anyone in the room
The girl who’s in the pit
Where no one else can reach
The girl who makes bad choices
For the smartest reasons
And good choices for the dumbest
The girl who can’t make it out of bed
But spends every penny of herself
The girl who runs harder to run at all
Here’s to me. Because you’re worth it.
She’s worth it.
I am worth it.
The mystic counsel of the national
endocrinology society have declared
Poly
Cystic
Ovary
Syndrome
to be
Metabolic
Reproductive
Syndrome.
And so my celibate gaggle
of letters becomes a title
a position, almost a
degree to describe
the relation my life
is bound to this syndrome –
not disease.
The questions
the confusion
multiply exponentially
What’s it to you? I ask them.
What Shakespeare said.
“I’m just on my way –
what? No way –
keys.
Where are the keys
Seriously?
Where’s my purse
And my credit cards
And my brain.
My poor lost mind.
Then I’ll be on my way.”
He garnished it with parsley
sprinkled it with salt
but it was still whattheysaid.
I wanted his thoughts raw.
I can’t compare myself to Sleeping Beauty
but I might say I’m like her castle
buried by an intricate maze of thorny
symptoms that incestuously feed
from each other but maybe I’m the princess –
buried somewhere inside the chaos
in a tower that doctors can’t find.
This is what happens when you let yourself go
greasy fries and Coca Cola
processed foot
saturated fat
sugars
-that’s what they judge when they see you
not the hours at the gym
sweat, tears, menu restrictions
visible torture summarized by two words:
insulin resistance.
I’d like to invent
a speed dating event
for doctors.
I don’t have the time
or the energy
or the interest
to invest in the horde who only want me for my money
who, like the true mysoginists they are, say I’m making my issues up
label them as “women’s issues”
prescribe a one-size-fits-all pill.
No – I can’t take more of them than
the satisfaction of looking in their faces
and saying No thanks. Moving on.