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growing up in pieces, except from a collection of short poetry
i.
for my grandmother
at the edges of earth, there
lays a sunset, streaking gold into
the eyes of the hungry/hurting/tired. The sun never
lies, grandma said once. Watch. Summer
stills, no more than
empty purples and fading light pinks
written in memory of gladiolus and
rosemary. Grandma leaves/smiles/boards a plane to China,
heartstrings tugging at dollops of sesame oil popping
on a hot skillet, with a scintilla of
autumn’s homesickness.
May I
slink out of grey December, miche
into corners of hell, burning bitter
herbs, pressing yellow flowers
against a black wilderness. Shrapnel
sinews sprouts of elm
into my bruised veins, inking a
way up to my red fingertips. Tears
fall, slipping down the slides of a park; raindrop lines on the window
of a silver Toyota, emblazoned by streets
of headlight paints. I peek out of
rusted metal bars, awaiting spring’s cover, blood
varnishing my lips in salty oblivion, gritty
with the soft taste of wine, while I live, sobbing/breathing/alive,
shackled against the distant/broken/sweet
lullabies of
home.
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