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krissa-jean-boman
krissa-jean-boman
American I write to the hum of my heater.
Sometimes I lie When people ask me those questions Like “who inspires you the most” Or “what is the most influential thing to have happened in your life” Sometimes I talk about Women in science Or growing up adopted Or being a struggling reader when I was in third grade I never talk about my mom I never talk about feeling like I had missing pieces Not just in my heart but in my mind Like someone pulled out the naughty things The bad things Leaving me with only leftovers. When people ask me for my best story Sometimes I talk about how I faked a peanut allergy And how a boy stabbed me with an epipen when I ate a peanut butter malt in front of him Thinking he was saving my life. I usually avoid the part About me wishing that those drugs were lethal That an epipen could end it all. I find small talk to be so hard Because there aren’t enough good bits inside me To make it through a conversation. If you see me Can you just do that thing Where we make eye contact and nod slightly Smiling sometimes and not stopping. I don’t have anything Truthful left to say.
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Apr 13, 2019
Apr 13, 2019 at 9:39 PM UTC
Peanut butter Drugs
Sometimes I just sit and think about flowers. The differences between petals and leaves and how to best clean dirt from under my fingernails. Sometimes I just sit and think about flowers.
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Mar 1, 2017
Mar 1, 2017 at 12:04 AM UTC
Pink
"What do you think heaven looks like?" "Clouds. Sunshine. Angels." "But really? You don't think heaven has desks and post offices and plastic grocery bags?" "Probably not." "Oh."
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Dec 1, 2016
Dec 1, 2016 at 1:21 AM UTC
Kitchen Appliances
Do you think God ever had a moment just a second that the weight of the world was just too heavy?
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Dec 1, 2016
Dec 1, 2016 at 1:20 AM UTC
Creation
I am a product of my parents: a combination of hypersensitivity and anti-depressants. I can see my mother in the way I flinch when my the bus heaves taking me to my next appointment. My parents did not teach me to be inquisitive but after running from one doctor to the next I needed to know can medication really save a soul?
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Jan 14, 2016
Jan 14, 2016 at 2:18 PM UTC
Undermedicated
The last time we met it was raining and the stampede of raindrops on the roof must have made it hard for you to hear. I had wanted to tell you about my mother how I wasn’t yet five feet tall when she was six feet under. Lover, listen. Incurable illnesses cannot recognize the plumpness of an over ripe nectarine from the plumpness of a woman’s breast. And the last time we met I don’t think you heard me say that my name is Amelia because you kept moaning Sarah. Now, lover. I understand the impossibility of moving on but I’ve run out of excuses to make. There’s no Lauren or Patrice just me in these sheets. Lover, please. Pick me.
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Sep 3, 2015
Sep 3, 2015 at 1:42 AM UTC
Love, Amelia
I watched a body burn yesterday, with eyes closed shut and brown hair parted so perfectly that it couldn’t possibly have been you. But it was wearing your shoes the faded blue Converse that I tried to throw away when you weren’t looking. Your mom must have salvaged them. I’ve been looking for you in the places I thought would remember you. I have found that you don’t exist anywhere: not in the urn resting in your mother’s living room not in the shower where I try to freeze the love out of me. You have left me smoldering. Your mom told me they burned you with a pack of cigarettes in your jacket pocket. The faint smell of burning tobacco would follow you to death. I think I might hate you. You told me it was your trademark to leave people wondering about where you were going. I thought you were just mysterious not intentionally cruel. But you have left me here left me not knowing if my heart is on fire or if I stepped into the crematorium with you. I can’t breathe right now. Completely burnt out.
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Sep 3, 2015
Sep 3, 2015 at 1:40 AM UTC
The American Cremation Society
I first noticed my abnormal heartbeat in Duluth, Minnesota. Standing across the canal from you separated by water and the waves waves waves. I still swear to this day that it was your breath I heard mingling with the hush of water. The next time I notice my heart we’re at the hospital. You tell me to uncross my ankles and hold out my wrist your thumb brushing over the more delicate part of its skin and your stethoscope cold on my throat. It’s only a one-two-three four before you’re pulling away my pulse going with you. I don’t care if I have to live with arrhythmia live with the pills and the appointments and the lack of a steady thump thump thump in my chest. Just the ghost of the feel of your thumb on my pulse point on my wrist on my neck curving behind my ear and my hand on your heart with your thump thump thump, will keep my blood flowing. I’m a girl with a broken heart and I’m in love with a cardiologist.
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Sep 3, 2015
Sep 3, 2015 at 1:39 AM UTC
In Love with a Cardiologist
A man and a woman stand in a yard their fingertips touching slightly. She sits between them criss-cross-applesauce hands in her lap voice off like she was taught in school. Mom and dad have a secret. She thinks there is a surprise waiting for her in the house. Katherine Katherine Anne Katherine Anne Seymour Katie There is something abnormal about you cell deep malignant and capable of killing. If we could take it out of you and put it somewhere else like a star or the highest branch of the tallest tree somewhere so unreachable that we could ignore its pain we would. But Katie Katherine Anne Kitty Cat we can't.
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Mar 5, 2015
Mar 5, 2015 at 12:00 AM UTC
Keep it Together for the Kid
I need you to know that I no longer write about you.
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Jan 13, 2015
Jan 13, 2015 at 2:46 PM UTC
i'm willing to be acquaintances