Poem about the pressure to be model thin and beautiful in society today. |
Pretty 1 I dreamed of carving knives sharp Thanksgiving blades still covered in turkey grease and hands somehow familiar stroked the blades ground them against a stone then seized my wrists and made me promise from now on to be good. Before I could scream or agree the blade buried in my armpit and in one quick stroke the bottom half of my arm fell to the floor with a wet thud. Then went the second methodically the pieces of me fell like a sick rain until some doctor came to help me grow skin again. In another a bottle beckoned and I swallowed one after another until I distended and ruptured or I was jailed without food and my penance a never ending run. They were my hands I later realized and these were fantasies not nightmares. 2 I used to think that if I got close enough to a friend and brave enough to stretch out my hand a perfect copy of my mother’s fingers and touch her, just lightly on the arm she’d inwardly cringe or worse look at it like it was a roach she wanted to slap away and afterwards when I’m gone scrub the spot raw and pray my hands would never search for her again. 3 I have a pretty face. That’s what they say when they want to assure me and give me confidence without having to believe someone like me could ever be beautiful. “You have such a pretty face.” Such a deadly phrase deciphered it means nothing else on you is acceptable. “Those lips” if it weren’t for the rest of you “better yet those cheeks and eyes” you’d be perfect. Maybe I could live with that if you could look me in the face when you said it. 4 I am convinced I live in the wrong country. No matter how great or how scandalous it has become I could have forgiven anything save this America the beautiful tell me again how pretty is my face? |