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mask of cardamom
i wear a mask stitched with the knotted fiber of
olive-colored pods brimming with umber seeds.
it weighs down my battered shoulders and sparks shame
into bruising skin but the necessity of the beautiful
lie is what shoves the bitter seeds to pinch tightly
at the corner of my mouth and burn my insides as i dash
to catch the impatient school bus- even as my lips purse
and i flutter weary eyes in exhaustion of this wicked dance
i know that the cardamom is the enemy of my enemy. and it
gloats at this- holds my pride in black iron chains as i
languish in its promised protection in this pernicious prison.
it weaves into my mind tear-stained memories of girls tilting
bodies away and scrunching up their noses as they inhale
through their mouths. it shows me the slow-motion rewinding
of boys turning minutely and whispering to their classmates.
i see grinning faces in flashing radio static like panning
camera frames as a fake heave catches my ears and the
failed stifling of hysterical giggles burn at pierced ears.
i wince as stupid-me in the black-and-white memory covers her
mouth- breath tainted with the aromatic chili curry that mother
cooked at 5:00 AM and served blazing hot- and runs into the
bathroom to wash her reddened throat fifteen times in hopes
that cool water will wash away the spices and the sins.
and as the little girl cries i cry as well- and my tears are
bitter-burning against the cloth of the cardamom mask. for i
have read the sequel to this shakespearean tragedy- i know
that after this day the girl will keep a straw-stained jar
of seeds in her backpack- she will eat them after breakfast
and lunch and dinner in solemn scorn and broken hope in
exhaustion like a weary drug addict- she will pledge herself
to hiding the smell of Indian tiffin with neutral spice- she
will allow herself to be bound to a cage made by the knotted
fiber of olive-colored pods brimming with umber seeds-
and she will never forget to eat the cardamom.
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