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My Mother Was a Freedom Fighter

Page 7

by Aja Monet


  at the bottom of the atlantic, there will be a war

  on the terror

  may a thousand nails chase you in your sleep,

  claw at your flesh like unicorn horns

  angels will tear their wings from their backs

  and beat the shit out of you

  with them, feathers splattered wet like abstract art.

  for they will fall in your vanity, wishing to be human

  just so they can show you how it is done.

  may a million battered women march out of their graves

  and dig their rest in your trembling soul

  and she wishes, she wishes she could say all of these things

  but us women are said to have carried our hearts

  on our sleeves, always washing laundry

  in case it bleeds thru the seams

  she lives in an apartment made of bricks

  with a bathroom that sings of a fleeting heart,

  her kitchen faucet has a sore throat,

  ends up in conversations with the skin of her eardrums

  at night, she loves in silence

  dreams of a voice for making love

  on white linen, stained with well-worn human.

  in Octobers, she imagines windows

  like the ones along her new lover’s spine

  logan square

  for roger

  there was never a right moment to speak

  or laugh. when they pried my legs apart

  fresh outta my mother’s womb,

  they should’ve told me, go back

  girl, go back in and hide

  take cover, they should’ve

  warned me about the war.

  instead of borrowing books

  from the walls of my mother’s

  regrets, i could’ve been preparing

  in her uterus, could’ve been studying

  the proper way to load a rifle,

  i would’ve known the heart at

  greater length, could’ve learned

  well ahead of time how to operate

  heavy machinery.

  sometimes when i sit in a room

  full of black women

  i am counting the ride-or-die bitches

  i am ducking down behind

  my spirit, praying they won’t vote me

  the martyr.

  i am convincing myself

  we aren’t bitter

  fighting the word so desperately

  i laugh with the womanizer,

  i play cards with the cheater,

  i dance with the dead beat,

  all the while flirting with anger.

  i never liked anger,

  it was always my least favorite of

  emotions but damn, how that bitch thrills.

  when i hear a strange mahogany voice

  i wrap my ears around the words

  the sound of such an instrument is

  haunting heaven, some songs

  i will never sing simply

  because i am expected to do so

  some men i will never love

  simply because i love them.

  when i rose into a conversation of your artillery,

  when i marched along the battlefield,

  noting the bodies lying around us

  i was praying that the casualties

  would understand, that somehow they pitied you

  even then, rather you’d live and wrestle a lifetime

  of demons, then beheaded and forgotten

  i rather you remembered,

  each day is a memorial

  for some woman

  waiting at a dining-room table

  in Chicago, on a damp april night

  sharpening the rotating blades

  in her mouth, waiting

  with an automatic in her lap

  a finger stuttering on the trigger

  it doesn’t heal me to see you hurt

  doesn’t make the wounds

  go away, if i can encourage you

  to put down your weapons, maybe

  we can both make it out alive.

  lately, i’ve been playing russian roulette

  with whiskey shots

  clenching my eyes at bitterness

  when he walked into the room

  last night, i felt like a victim

  for the first ten minutes

  a chill came through me,

  men are walking coffins

  of secrets, they make love on grave sites

  i say this to say, your past never goes away

  ten years from now

  you may be caught pushing

  your daughter in a cart down the grocery aisle

  and there are still those women

  women whose bodies tense and quake

  when they see you,

  whose blood boils with flashbacks

  of your fingers around their throat,

  your thrust breaking them open

  memories on aisle 4

  perhaps you are a better man now

  but you still hold her tight in nightmares

  sometimes it’s too late

  the memory is stale

  is poison and gangrene

  sometimes it must be cut off

  in order

  to live.

  is that all you got

  you are obligated to continue creating, says God

  there are some things that will bring even the strongest woman down

  for colored girls it is the moment you hear the spirit break

  breaking

  tugging

  dragging

  skidding

  shrinking

  whistling along

  the spirit gets up off the floor of your belly

  yells, what the fuck you broken for

  you is blessed all up and down girl

  you are powerful in your wounding

  screams, is that all you got

  still bleeding and bone shed

  ankle jolting and tone dead

  shackle and tree branch strong

  the spirit knows, she says, is that all you got

  i’m sorry you don’t know beautiful when it’s staring at you

  it is this moment wide-eyed, shedding hurricanes

  floodlike

  floating bodies

  like purple open-arm skies

  like all i wanted to do was love you

  like to be loved

  like is that all you got?

  what the fuck is you broken for?

  like worlds stretching their legs in your eyelids

  like i would’ve gave up my dreams for you

  like if only you would’ve asked me

  the spirit remembers her grandmother’s name is Grace

  and her father’s name is Angel

  she will never forget where she came from

  from junkie and jail cell

  hopscotch and block party summers

  she is left for dead children

  a testimony to roses

  in concrete, a seed head dandelion born in Brooklyn

  she is made of miracle and magic

  wears struggle like a miniskirt she rolled up

  when her mother wasn’t lookin

  rocks the flyest kicks

  with the latest cell phone

  and a smile

  a smile

  she smiles

  knows smiling

  has perfected the art of smiling through pain

  and around the corner she found her father

  found her father on the corner

  with shabby knees and a beggar’s face

  she is tired of forgiving

  of becoming her mother

  of having a child she never wanted

  with a man who didn’t know how to love her

  she is tired

  she is tired

  she is tired

  she is tired of trying to be everything

  for everyone and nothi
ng for herself

  she is not alone

  and ain’t nothing nobody’s fault but her own

  is not deserving of love

  or tenderness, a hug

  to be held, to be vulnerable.

  until broken

  until understood

  until battle scar

  until well behaved

  until perfect and invincible

  until aunt jemima on a stripper pole

  she is your wet dream

  she is wifey material

  until she is made real

  is holy ghost tongue possessed

  called crazy, gone mad

  gone lisa left eye

  gone whitney houston

  gone billie holiday

  gone my mother

  she is your soulmate because she knows how to love

  like we survived slave ships

  like thrown overboard babies

  and backs whipped

  she loves

  the real way

  like i am trying to learn

  like teach me

  like let me teach you

  like i got you

  like you my nigga

  like i got you

  like only i can style on you

  like back in the day

  like don’t ever diss this woman

  don’t you know she is the backbone of a family

  is not just a breeder

  or hand-me-down

  or a night stand

  she is relentless, has never given up

  until this day has still not given up.

  drenched in the smell of her own breast milk

  asks, do you understand

  do you understand me

  don’t talk to me of love if you don’t know broken

  don’t know what it means to break

  to still love

  to break

  to still love

  enuff to take her up in your arms

  when she’s stank and broken

  to swallow that ego the white man done gave you

  ego never looked good on a black man

  he was never well suited for treating his woman this way

  musta been something he learned

  picked up in school

  his mama did not teach him that

  caution

  this is not a metaphor

  did you know she bleeds

  she bleeds monthly

  did you see the god in that

  her beauty is not an excuse for some

  flattery word poem

  do not romanticize

  do not write her another love poem

  love her into romance

  she is not your childhood

  she is now

  she is right now

  spirit is heartbeat and blink

  she’s a poem at the brink of breaking in your eyes

  she is not a martyr for your cause

  you musta forgot you were a king

  musta forgot you were a king

  in her queendom

  her cause is ours

  not yours is ours

  is that all you got,

  what the fuck is you broken for?

  let’s don’t

  how about we not

  no more is we grudges

  don’t special each other

  like we used to, is this what comes of

  so comfy with what is

  we forget what was?

  ain’t you anticapitalist?

  is we lovin or nah?

  the emerging woman after aborting a girl

  8 a.m. in September

  my daughter chose to show up

  at my doorstep

  unannounced

  had the nerve to come talk to me

  about being a mother

  when i wasn’t ready

  for no giving up my life

  to mother no ungrateful child

  wasn’t in no place to open no doors,

  to let her see my empty cupboard,

  to open my empty fridge, i ain’t got

  time to explain to no child why

  i write poems to relic the ruckus,

  why i collect Sallie Mae letters in bags and post

  collages on walls or why i can’t love the way nobody taught me

  how or why my flaws show up in her face

  or how my dimples fall deep in her cheekbone

  ain’t got the heart to reason with her

  my selfish choices or all the ways

  i couldn’t be of sacrifice,

  i couldn’t be nobody’s Christ,

  i ain’t got enough hours in the day

  to be somebody’s God and i look at her face, i couldn’t

  bring myself to open the door, i couldn’t stand

  to see her through the peephole, all my life

  flashed before my eyes

  and one day she’ll be a womanor not

  have some children of her ownor not

  she’ll understandor not

  not till she does will she know the depth, how we raise our heartaches

  and love the world whole,

  healing through, snatching at glimpses of ourselves

  while we offer pieces of flesh to this earth,

  nah there ain’t

  no mother here

  you best be

  on your way.

  a small luxury

  omega institute wellness center

  i don’t usually do these things.

  i cannot tell the difference

  between

  pain and pleasure. she places pressure

  along my back, does it hurt here? what about

  here? lifting my head, i have high tolerance

  for pain, i say.

  she sighs, a disappointed sigh—

  we can still acknowledge

  its magnitude. later, she asks how

  i liked the massage: what a relief, i say.

  what a relief

  dream deferred

  i wear a wreath of miscarriages,

  the right and wrong of it. heavily

  drugged, i bled and bled watching

  droplets of me swirl down the drain

  my breasts were voltaic to touch

  shouting words at doorknobs, i cry

  my worst cry. ugly, my mouth is

  frightened. my partner cannot face me

  he is on call. everywhere we go

  i am a single mother mourning

  in public. my joy is short-lived.

  i mutter confessions to strangers,

  i’m fine, i promise. i’m fine.

  each poem i take my pedestals and bury them

  scuttling in an empty bottle

  a feast of foot-pressed grapes devoured

  aching in the bend of a smirk

  a hood rat shaking a hangover from a brow

  my voice shivers words

  settles in like a bunch of birds by a fountain

  in what washes

  water of the spirits

  she is familiar in ways

  honestly i am many strange selves

  stories in palms, fistful of poems never read

  pouring of a world away from worlds

  i am every grand entrance and final departure

  daylight hidden in the evening of me

  confused for stars my eyes see

  of rants and reasons

  sprung of savvy sadness

  quick on feet and aware

  with all my being i hurl sounds at moving men

  chin tilted toward partial truths

  i unicycle up crowded sidewalks

  and study traffic with a monocle on my third eye

  i break from balancing

  oceans and clouds, connecting

  roads of homes and people

  burning this season of blowtorch in my country

  suddenly i feel not so alone

  worry for nothing

  spect
ators study how we hurt

  all you have to do in life is live a little

  knowing is no good without understanding

  a woman walking

  alone as a dragonfly

  sauntering at sunset, a liar and an honest woman

  sparing you fear and belief in another

  speaking of disaster, she is, i am

  remnants of you

  we suffer each other

  in a summer crawl from innocence, a rusted gospel

  singing in a sloppy cry, i am my papa’s waltz

  poem is a form i leave

  for bookshelves and end tables collecting dust

  one day i’ll look back and laugh

  i am a lady in contemplation

  knee-deep in thought, floating in

  mulled upon confusion

  i appear so selfish

  i am borderline myself

  i breathe deeply

  you make holy war

  you

  who are

  beautiful

  are

  always thinking.

  there is no image

  like the image

  of a man who thinks.

  the inside of my right thigh

  will be where he writes

  his autobiography.

  he is obsessed with leaving

  love notes on my skin

  and I will wake up

  some mornings i walk past

  the bathroom mirror

  finding things like “remember me”

  drawn backwards

  across my collarbone.

  this is to the man who throws

  a penny in the water fountain

  and it throws it back

  the metaphor of your life.

  it rained

  the day before you came

  the sky fell

  knocked over

  dripping red from God’s veins.

  it smelled of all the wet things in New York City.

  when i got home, soaking and heavy,

  it was silent—the clock clapped

  its hands. i was hoping you’d bring me flowers

  from the last grave you buried your mind in.

  i was hoping you’d at least remember to

  kiss me first.

  you simply smiled and shook your head

  so that your hair, silly and waving,

  rambled over your forehead

  like surrendering flags.

  you make my blood self-conscious.

  i can’t look at you

  without a little girl

  drowning in me,

  without a self-righteous

  woman running naked

  down my spine,

  a dove flapping its wings

  against the walls

  of my stomach

  i can’t look at you without tripping

  over my eyelids. you hold a world

  in those eyes of yours.

  when God made you,

 

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