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salt. Page 2

by waheed, nayyirah


  stay is a sensitive word.

  we wear

  who stayed

  and

  who left

  in our skin forever.

  –– sojourn

  what

  we hide

  and do not

  say

  turns into

  another mouth

  that

  only we know.

  –– mouths

  as a woman

  i know the difference between

  appreciation

  and

  teeth.

  what really hurts

  is that

  as a girl

  i had to know the same thing.

  –– survivor

  i am a silk field of vulnerability.

  be careful

  of all the things

  you lose

  in someone’s mouth

  when you love them.

  if you deserve

  honey

  mine will flow from my arms to yours

  no effort, no asking.

  but, if there is none

  and

  you feel wind instead.

  know

  that my spirit already

  senses that

  when you smell sweetness

  you

  begin harvesting blades in your hands.

  –– kindness is a form of intelligence

  what can i do

  when the night comes

  and

  i break into stars.

  –– osmosis

  do not

  put

  your hand

  in the mouth of loneliness.

  its teeth are soft

  but it will scar you for life.

  –– do not be seduced by the lonely ones

  you travel

  to lush looted countries

  parts of earth laying on their sides

  barely breathing

  hot with rust, infection, and tourist anemia.

  you and your camera arrive.

  start tearing at bodies

  with

  your lust.

  it’s harmless.

  appreciating culture.

  sharing.

  honoring clothing.

  the way certain skin exists.

  oh

  you’ve sold those photographs

  the ones you were so excited about.

  the one you ‘caught’ with children being children.

  the one with the woman you thought so ‘beautiful.’

  you and your camera

  eat

  as much as one stomach and three sd cards can hold.

  get on a plane

  and

  leave with the belief

  that

  your eyes are

  clean.

  honest.

  artistic.

  –– photography | the gaze

  the night was busy making the moon

  so

  i gathered my quilt

  and softly

  told my heart

  we’d come back

  tomorrow.

  my whole life

  i have

  ate my tongue.

  ate my tongue.

  ate my tongue.

  i am so full of my tongue

  you would think speaking is easy.

  but it is not.

  –– for we who keep our lives in our mouths

  africa does not need your tears.

  or

  your prayers.

  or

  your money.

  or

  your t-shirts.

  or

  your telethons.

  or

  your hands ever so lovingly placed

  on her buttocks.

  your mouth at her breasts.

  your fists in her eyes.

  she wants you to stop pissing in her face

  and

  calling it water.

  she wants you to leave.

  she is the mother.

  she does not belong to you.

  you do not belong to her.

  and

  you hate this.

  but

  one day

  you will reap.

  what

  you have sown.

  –– aid

  men give birth, too.

  to children.

  to longings.

  to dreams.

  that they must hide.

  their stomachs.

  their uteruses.

  their hungers.

  their softness.

  their cravings for touch.

  to be

  a

  man.

  is the thing

  that closes their light.

  and

  eats their eyes.

  –– him

  there is you and you.

  this is a relationship.

  this is the most important relationship.

  –– home

  cry wild.

  you have probably never cried wild.

  but, you know what doors

  feel like.

  you have

  an intimacy with doors

  that is killing you.

  –– break

  decolonization

  requires

  acknowledging.

  that your

  needs and desires

  should

  never

  come at the expense of another’s

  life energy.

  it is being honest

  that

  you have been spoiled

  by a machine

  that

  is not feeding you freedom

  but

  feeding

  you

  the milk of pain.

  –– the release

  why can we never

  talk

  about the blood.

  the blood of our ancestors.

  the blood of our history.

  the blood between our legs.

  –– blood

  i will tell you, my daughter

  of your worth

  not your beauty

  everyday. (your beauty is a given. every being is born beautiful)

  knowing your worth

  can save your life.

  raising you on beauty alone

  you will be starved.

  you will be raw.

  you will be weak.

  an easy stomach.

  always in need of someone telling you how beautiful you are.

  –– emotional nutrition

  good.

  girl.

  –– rope

  your heart is the softest place on earth. take care of it.

  the

  diaspora is absolutely breathtaking.

  and

  the diaspora is in stunning pain.

  we

  are

  a great many things. all at once.

  –– myriad | disconnect

  getting yourself together.

  what about undoing yourself.

  –– the fix

  thick compassion.

  as thick as the throats of our fathers

  when they have already left

  but leave their words behind.

  .

  our fathers write us. all over us. their handwriting. we can not ignore. whether they have spelled our eyes. our mouths. or the need in our brows. we can not help but be their poem.

  .

  how could they think they are not important. we are houses eaten by rivers because we do not know their smell. when we are looking all the way through ourselves, we are looking for them. how dare they remove themselves from our sight. we have a right to be able to recognize our father if he is passing us on the street.

  .

  what kind of heart break is he. what night was it that he decided. what did the moon look like. was he hungry. s
o hungry, that he would give me up. give us up. how do they give us up so easily. so willingly. they take out their voice. break us from it. and eat mist and guilt until we are but dreams.

  unharm someone

  by

  telling the truth you could not face

  when you

  struck instead of tended.

  –– put the fire out (unburn)

  the beauty of my people

  is

  so

  thick and intricate.

  i spend days

  trying

  to undo my eyes

  so

  i can sleep.

  –– lace

  if

  the ocean

  can calm itself

  so can you.

  we

  are both

  salt water

  mixed

  with

  air.

  –– meditation

  racism is a translucent skin.

  it defends itself

  by

  attacking itself.

  –– reverse racism

  in our own ways

  we all break.

  it is okay

  to hold your heart outside of your body

  for

  days.

  months.

  years.

  at a time.

  –– heal

  you.

  not wanting me.

  was

  the beginning of me

  wanting myself.

  thank you.

  –– the hurt

  eyes that commit.

  that is what I am looking for.

  warm philadelphia night. blue bruise across the sky. groceries in hand. i dreamt last night of honey. my grandmother called me into a dream like she used to call me into a room. she gave me honey. honey for you. you, who will not talk. who will not swallow the news. who will not let anything near your throat. but, i can find you. i can find you even when you are there, in morocco. even when you have flown through your eyes but not your body. when you are holding me, and i am practicing being limp with restraint, because i am really holding you. when you refuse to change back from water and want to fill our whole house with the sebou. i know, my sweet. we have spoke of her the entire length of our love. she was your eyes the day i met you. remember, you and i. on the floor, you teaching me of how she eats. three fingers on the right hand only. i have worn her clothes. ate her language from your mouth. and i knew, i knew when the phone calls came, and the tv started shrieking, and our house turned into weather, i knew this would break some of our bones. but my love, it is drinking us down to our teeth. i can not see you anymore. your smile. your legs. your heat. is lonely. the honey, grandmother said, is for your blood. it is to bring you back. but, she said, i must first ask, ‘if’ you want to come back. and though, ‘if’ is a razor to my vein, i will ask. so, i am not asking ‘when’ you will come back. because, i can take it, the swimming in your body, the lostness, your growing appetite for doors. i am not asking when. ‘when,’ is not something you ask someone when the bodies of their aunt. uncle. friends. first love. can not be found. i am asking‚ ‘if.’ because i am here. dangling from your left ring finger, wringing oceans out of my skin, and coming home every night. i know your family is tattoo and it is their screaming voices you hear when I say i love you. i know, she is the love you are, the land you are made of, and she is hemorrhaging. war is eating her heart. but, you are losing yours too, my love.

  –– what the war has done to us

  white people try to take

  blackness.

  pour it out

  rub it into their skin

  and

  wear us

  like they know what we about.

  but

  honey

  it’s only ever gon’ be a suntan.

  you

  ain’t neva gon’ be black.

  –– tan | stealing from the sun

  stop speaking.

  use your eyes, instead.

  –– the eye fire

  be insecure

  in peace.

  allow yourself

  lowness.

  know that it is

  only

  a

  country

  on

  the way to who you are.

  –– traveling

  if.

  we.

  are

  with child.

  and

  you believe that fatherhood

  begins

  when my body pours a baby into your hands.

  not before.

  you do not deserve this child.

  you are a coward.

  –– you are a father the moment you enter me

  do

  not ever

  be

  afraid to tell me

  who you are.

  i am going to find

  out

  eventually.

  –– blunt

  you ask

  to touch my hair

  or worse

  touch it without asking.

  this is not innocence.

  this is not ignorance.

  this is not curiosity.

  this is the very racist and subhuman belief

  that

  you have a right to me.

  –– i will break your hand. do not ever touch me | every time you touch my hair my ancestors place a curse on you

  your soul stained my shoulders.

  my whole life smells like you.

  this

  will take time.

  undoing you from my blood.

  –– the work

  our ache

  for

  africa.

  is

  the heart

  behind

  our heart.

  the pain with no name.

  –– amnesia

  i am a woman

  and

  a poem.

  –– visceral

  when you allow

  that man.

  to walk through your children.

  plant his feet.

  in

  their veins.

  hold their voices.

  necks.

  bodies.

  inside his violence.

  you are no longer a mother.

  when you give him the key to that door. because you need

  to be loved by someone.

  you have seasoned them for the wolf.

  burned their childhood into a fantasy.

  it’s going to take a third of their lives.

  all the courage.

  from

  their cells to their hair.

  to learn the alchemetic formula

  that

  turns that kind of betrayal.

  a demothering.

  soft.

  liveable.

  –– before you get that key made

  the worst

  thing that ever happened

  to

  the world

  was

  the white man coming across gun powder.

  –– the end of the world | the beginning of white supremacy

  soon

  the moon will come from my lips

  and

  you will not remember your name.

  –– oshún

  there is a phantom language in my mouth.

  a tongue beneath my tongue.

  will i ever

  remember what

  i sound

  like.

  will i ever come home.

  –– african american i

  i lost a whole continent.

  a whole continent from my memory.

  unlike all other hyphenated americans

  my hyphen is made of blood. feces. bone.

  when africa says hello

  my mouth is a heartbreak

  because i have nothing in my tongue

  to answer her.

 
i do not know how to say hello to my mother.

  –– african american ii

  can you be a daughter.

  if you have no

  mother language.

  –– african american iii

  how beautiful

  that you can lay down a map

  and with a straight finger

  show me who you are.

  you say

  'show me, show me who you are.'

  i tell my soft tight finger

  'do not be afraid'

  i slow and lightly

  lay it on africa (as if i do not belong to her)

  and

  then

  you ask me

  ‘where.’

  –– african american iiii

  we are afraid.

  ashamed.

  of

  africa.

  –– the secret we never say | african american iiiii

  i like

  the heat

  in certain words.

  the warm travel.

  the low sun.

  you do not have to be a fire

  for

  every mountain blocking you.

  you could be a water

  and

  soft river your way to freedom

  too.

  –– options

  sometimes the night wakes in the

  middle of me

  and i can do nothing

  but

  become the moon.

  i want to see

  brown and black folks

  photographed

  by

  brown and black eyes.

  –– eyes

  to not be safe on the earth.

  simply

  because

  of the color of your skin.

  how does a being survive this.

  –– trayvon martin

  if

  a man

  can

  only show vulnerability

 

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