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samanthairene
samanthairene
American
The first time I thought about my body I was a sticky thirteen. My religion teacher was always telling us, "Your body is a temple," which really just meant, "Don't have *** because you know Jesus Hate ***** Ten years later, everyone says, "LOVE YOUR BODY," and I can't stop checking myself out in every mirror I pass. "Love your body," whispered like a prayer & all I hear is, "Your body is a temple. Your body is a temple. Your body is a ******* TEMPLE." What a joke: I never hated my body until someone told me not to. II. "Your body is a temple." My body is a wasteland. My body is an empire, long-fought-over and oft-desecrated by a war I didn't start, fought with curling irons and tubes of lip gloss. My body is a canvas upon which I have painted a thousand versions of myself - versions I'd hardly recognize now, versions I wish I could get back. My body is evidence in the crime of my life that proves definitely I did not sit back. I was not a passive observer. My body is a vessel, which is to say it is nothing / it is everything. "Your body is a temple." Don't tell me about my body. I've seen my reflection. It doesn't even tell half the story. III. At work, Bobby the Regular always sits at the bar and greets me with, "You look gorgeous." He looks me dead in the eye with such grave importance, like the revelation might save my life, or like he's the first man to ever wanna **** me. I know he thinks he's doing me a favor, but I've never felt less confident than when a strange man tells me I'm beautiful. IV. The first time my daughter comes crying to me that she hates her body, I will not tell her she is wrong. Instead, I will look her in the eye and say, *"Your lungs fill up with air involuntarily & your heart beats 80 times per minute & when you fall off of your bike and skin your knee, you cry because it hurts & your body is not a temple. You don't have to worship at its altar."* I will tell her all the things I should have told myself.
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May 1, 2016
May 1, 2016 at 11:41 PM UTC
what if i don't want to love my body?
The first time I thought about my body I was a sticky thirteen. My religion teacher was always telling us, "Your body is a temple," which really just meant, "Don't have *** because you know Jesus Hate ***** Ten years later, everyone says, "LOVE YOUR BODY," and I can't stop checking myself out in every mirror I pass. "Love your body," whispered like a prayer & all I hear is, "Your body is a temple. Your body is a temple. Your body is a ******* TEMPLE." What a joke: I never hated my body until someone told me not to. II. "Your body is a temple." My body is a wasteland. My body is an empire, long-fought-over and oft-desecrated by a war I didn't start, fought with curling irons and tubes of lip gloss. My body is a canvas upon which I have painted a thousand versions of myself - versions I'd hardly recognize now, versions I wish I could get back. My body is evidence in the crime of my life that proves definitely I did not sit back. I was not a passive observer. My body is a vessel, which is to say it is nothing / it is everything. "Your body is a temple." Don't tell me about my body. I've seen my reflection. It doesn't even tell half the story. III. At work, Bobby the Regular always sits at the bar and greets me with, "You look gorgeous." He looks me dead in the eye with such grave importance, like the revelation might save my life, or like he's the first man to ever wanna **** me. I know he thinks he's doing me a favor, but I've never felt less confident than when a strange man tells me I'm beautiful. IV. The first time my daughter comes crying to me that she hates her body, I will not tell her she is wrong. Instead, I will look her in the eye and say, *"Your lungs fill up with air involuntarily & your heart beats 80 times per minute & when you fall off of your bike and skin your knee, you cry because it hurts & your body is not a temple. You don't have to worship at its altar."* I will tell her all the things I should have told myself.
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56
Everything about this feels inevitable. I scribble poems down like a madwoman, and that's how I know this must be love. Infatuation always gets stuck on my tongue, and lust just buries me. See, I've read accounts of women who died of literal broken hearts and wondered why the sternum isn't the strongest bone in the body and whether it is our hearts are truly made of elastic or glass -- but mine just beats out of time whenever you brush up against me. It's the oldest story in the world. It's the only story I know how to tell.
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Apr 24, 2016
Apr 24, 2016 at 1:25 AM UTC
one day, i might stop writing love poems
Part I: happy things sunshine the smell of freshly cut grass in Spring running thought a sprinkler passing notes in class chocolate -- but also: your mother signing you asleep laying in a field and wishing on stars children's laughter the beating of my heart as I fall in love                                                       with you. Part II: things that hurt paper slicing your skin a wicked boy tugging at your hair the crack of your foot as it twists out of place stepping on a leggo falling off your bike -- but also: your best friend leaving you                (again and again) the destruction of a home your childhood finally falling away that you can be happy while my heart crumples in                                                                                         on                                                                                            itself. Part III:  sad things unrequited love lost puppies bare stages abandoned theatres the last cookie -- but also: moving away the last page of a really good book funerals for people you never really knew funerals for people you really did watching you        walk away
0
Oct 30, 2012
Oct 30, 2012 at 1:59 AM UTC
Cycle
Beneath golden-pink stars, you once grasped my fingers twixt yours and murmured, "The universe is a lonely place." I could not understand then what you meant, your words blasphemy to my eager years. *How could the universe be anything but bursting, joyful, welcoming while* you exist? I wondered, not bothering to add, with me after it because, after all, it was implied: Our lives hand in a weary balance, dependent upon the other. I cannot exist without you and you, my glorified disaster, cannot exist without me. It is an irreversible truth - written into the lining of the universe like the fact of gravity. With you gone, I thought my soul would crack in two, but I survive. A wretched existence. The sun you wake to will never quite be the sun I see. Your moon will be a pale imitation of the one I glimpse before shutting my eyes to this restless world. Stilling my restless heart. Under my feet the earth still turns but it no longer shares its secrets with me or anyone in this crowded city: it is too big, too busy, too filled with people always moving, breathing being. It has everything, this city, except for you. Surrounded by the bustle of all this life, I finally understand your eternal loneliness.
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May 31, 2012
May 31, 2012 at 12:24 AM UTC
i penned you into existence
We bury the dead en masse in a ceremony that must suffice but never really offers any closure. Around me, the widows and orphans and lovers weep, weep freely, without abandon, as if their tears posses some ancient power to resurrect the fallen or at least make themselves forget that they once existed among the living. My mother shakes in her bones next to me. Her pale, sick face as they toss my father's lifeless body into a ditch of thousands will haunt me until I exhale my final breath. I do not cry; no misplaced tears pass my eyelashes. I learned the moment the light escaped your twinkling, gracious eyes that my pronounced agony will never raise the dead. Tears are not for the deceased but for the living, those who must remain upon this earth to remember, to ache, to long, to rail against the cruelty of fate. Tears, like the dead, belong to the living. Without you, I belong to neither. I used to think it wasn't fair, my love, that I should go on living while you, soulless, vanish deep into the covetous arms of Death. I still think it's unfair, but I no longer consider myself the lucky one. I breathe in slowly, filling my lungs, selfishly enjoying it. My time is limited upon this rusty, dying earth, I know that all too well. Each second that ticks by is a reminder of how rapidly my time disappears.
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Mar 7, 2012
Mar 7, 2012 at 10:05 PM UTC
the dead belong to the living
Age four, I crept into my parents’ room, terrified that a Creature of the Night would ****** me away— afterwards, nights of my youth always spent in want of my mother’s embrace. But when the dam broke and the house collapsed and the center did not hold, I floundered, fifteen and useless, and I realized: humans are monsters, too.
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Feb 28, 2012
Feb 28, 2012 at 11:48 AM UTC
upon the divorce of my parents
Don’t believe them (*the books the fairy tales the romantic comedies*) when they tell you, “Love will find a way.” They are liars, spinning words like the Serpent to Eve. Love does not always prevail. Sometimes, you are twenty and stupid and far too drunk and when you wake up in the morning, he is gone. Sometimes you think, “I’ll tell him tomorrow,” and tomorrow never comes. Sometimes, he is the groom and you are the girl at the back of the church he once dated in college and forgot about. Sometimes, you are the bride and because this isn’t Hollywood, no one stops the wedding. Sometimes, you wait up until four o’clock in the morning for his call. Sometimes, it never comes. Sometimes, he dies. Sometimes, you do. Sometimes, you fight and yell and sob into the phone to your mother— who married too young and never really knew how to care for you anyway— but no matter how many dishes you throw, you just can’t make it work. Sometimes, he is a man when you marry him and a monster by the time your daughter is born. Sometimes, you drop your change in the supermarket, the mall, the subway, and when your fingers brush as you both reach down to scoop up the scattered pennies and dimes, you feel that electric shock. You look into his deep graygreenbluebrown eyes and see everything that will be: all the adventures not yet had, the promises not yet made— and then, amidst all that unlived life, his wife (girlfriend, fiancé) calls to him from twenty feet away and those promises never get made at all. Sometimes, you like him and he likes the girl with the long blonde hair and prettier smile. Sometimes, he likes you and you honestly just don’t give a **** Sometimes, there is no Prince Charming on a great white steed coming to battle the dragon. Sometimes, you have to save yourself. Sometimes, survival is the only happy ending. Sometimes, your families are feuding and no matter how much you try, you cannot reason with your father or mother or whoever is keeping you apart. Sometimes, after that, you both just die. Sometimes, it’s all about the timing. Sometimes, you go in one door and he goes out another, And then you never meet. Sometimes, you sob into your pillow and beg God to change his mind for you, but no amount of wishing can bring him back. Sometimes, you are separated—by culture, by Time, by universes, by a fate that has decided to break your heart in every way possible and then toss you out to sea just one last time, just to see if you’ll survive. Sometimes you never find that someone who makes your skin burn, who drives you crazy or keeps you sane. Sometimes, you are just lonely and then you die. Love doesn’t always prevail. But sometimes. Just sometimes. It does.
0
Feb 27, 2012
Feb 27, 2012 at 1:15 AM UTC
The truth about love
Don’t believe them (*the books the fairy tales the romantic comedies*) when they tell you, “Love will find a way.” They are liars, spinning words like the Serpent to Eve. Love does not always prevail. Sometimes, you are twenty and stupid and far too drunk and when you wake up in the morning, he is gone. Sometimes you think, “I’ll tell him tomorrow,” and tomorrow never comes. Sometimes, he is the groom and you are the girl at the back of the church he once dated in college and forgot about. Sometimes, you are the bride and because this isn’t Hollywood, no one stops the wedding. Sometimes, you wait up until four o’clock in the morning for his call. Sometimes, it never comes. Sometimes, he dies. Sometimes, you do. Sometimes, you fight and yell and sob into the phone to your mother— who married too young and never really knew how to care for you anyway— but no matter how many dishes you throw, you just can’t make it work. Sometimes, he is a man when you marry him and a monster by the time your daughter is born. Sometimes, you drop your change in the supermarket, the mall, the subway, and when your fingers brush as you both reach down to scoop up the scattered pennies and dimes, you feel that electric shock. You look into his deep graygreenbluebrown eyes and see everything that will be: all the adventures not yet had, the promises not yet made— and then, amidst all that unlived life, his wife (girlfriend, fiancé) calls to him from twenty feet away and those promises never get made at all. Sometimes, you like him and he likes the girl with the long blonde hair and prettier smile. Sometimes, he likes you and you honestly just don’t give a **** Sometimes, there is no Prince Charming on a great white steed coming to battle the dragon. Sometimes, you have to save yourself. Sometimes, survival is the only happy ending. Sometimes, your families are feuding and no matter how much you try, you cannot reason with your father or mother or whoever is keeping you apart. Sometimes, after that, you both just die. Sometimes, it’s all about the timing. Sometimes, you go in one door and he goes out another, And then you never meet. Sometimes, you sob into your pillow and beg God to change his mind for you, but no amount of wishing can bring him back. Sometimes, you are separated—by culture, by Time, by universes, by a fate that has decided to break your heart in every way possible and then toss you out to sea just one last time, just to see if you’ll survive. Sometimes you never find that someone who makes your skin burn, who drives you crazy or keeps you sane. Sometimes, you are just lonely and then you die. Love doesn’t always prevail. But sometimes. Just sometimes. It does.
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61
You do quite well at convincing them of your normality: You smile, and hold your tongue, towing the line between quirky and downright bizarre. You play their game and let them believe what they must to sleep at night. But in the depths of your soul, You feel the thrumming heartbeat Of the universe— Its howls of agony And its music flowing through                                                your veins. Your heart hammers in your chest            to the call of the stars. You will follow it to the end of all things.
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Feb 23, 2012
Feb 23, 2012 at 1:30 AM UTC
the universe sounds quiet to those who refuse to listen
You left. I stood in the shower, Scrubbing my body clean, Trying to erase the scent of you. If I could, I would peel away this skin, Push aside these bones, And pick out the pieces of your soul You tried to entwine with mine— Wrap them in a package And mail it to you Some day you least expect. You appear some nights in my dreams, But the nightmares come When the daylight shines brightest.
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Feb 23, 2012
Feb 23, 2012 at 1:26 AM UTC
Detox
silence. stillness. turmoil of the mind. you’re coaxed into security (then insecurity, then confusion) lips part, eyes blink— the longest moment in history (and you want nothing to do with him) no broken bones but a twist and a tumble and those glorified butterflies make their first entrance. you curse the gods and reject the destiny that lingers on his lips. you blame gravity.
0
Feb 23, 2012
Feb 23, 2012 at 1:25 AM UTC
the physics of falling