Men
By staticshakedown
- 2202 reads
I showed my mother my arm
with its three tear drops of bites
falling down it
when she spotted two from beneath my sleeve
—red with nail marks—
and asked to see the others.
She frowned,
fingering the invisible line
that connected all three,
and said,
“Bed bugs.”
One bite was bigger than the others
so I named them: Saturn,
Uranus, Neptune.
This reminded me:
my sister stopped wearing shorts
because of a patch of freckles on her left leg.
In third grade
they learned about the Solar System
and a boy, pointing to her leg, said:
“It looks like the Milky Way”—
which hurt her feelings
forever.
Saturn is the same size
as the pockmark
on my friend’s arm
from the smallpox vaccine.
I remember in grade-school
I would press my finger to it and say,
“Ring, ring!”
“They itch,”
I complained,
sawing at my arm again.
“Then put some rubbing alcohol on it,”
instructed my mother.
“And from now on
stop reading on your sister’s bed.
At least not at night.”
The Doctors eventually excised
the Milky Way from my sister’s leg.
Not for cosmetic reasons
but because they said something so big
could only lead to cancer.
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Comments
this is certainly very
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i think this is excellent -
maisie Guess what? I'm still alive!
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Definitely has something
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I read this poem and felt I
I read this poem and felt I was diving in to something deep. It did not disappoint.
You need to look at the words though and mercilessly cut out every word that is not pulling its weight.
For example:
Saturn is the same size as my friend’s
pockmark on her arm that she got
from the smallpox vaccine.
I remember in grade-school I would
press my finger to it and say,
“Ring, ring!”
How about:
Saturn is the size
of the pockmark
on my friend’s arm
from the smallpox vaccine.
In grade-school
I pressed my finger to it saying
“Ring, ring!”
Be ruthless, words don't feel pain.
- Log in to post comments
I read this poem and felt I
I read this poem and felt I was diving in to something deep. It did not disappoint.
You need to look at the words though and mercilessly cut out every word that is not pulling its weight.
For example:
Saturn is the same size as my friend’s
pockmark on her arm that she got
from the smallpox vaccine.
I remember in grade-school I would
press my finger to it and say,
“Ring, ring!”
How about:
Saturn is the size
of the pockmark
on my friend’s arm
from the smallpox vaccine.
In grade-school
I pressed my finger to it saying
“Ring, ring!”
Be ruthless, words don't feel pain.
- Log in to post comments