because others could not have it
Guilt taught me I could not watch videos of people ******* because ******* was a sin
And that my body was sacred so only a man I loved
and was married to could touch it
For as long as I remember
He was there, smiling
When I was seven,
My mother told me I was born a sinner
And guilt was just the desire to be forgiven from this natural condition
So every time my body pressed against a pillow
Rhythmically
In my grandmother’s room
With no one
but the sight of Guilt judging me with His piercing eyes —
I did not question it
I was a sinner
Simply for loving my own body
Pasayloa ko… pasayloa mi sa among mga sala, my mother chanted in every prayer —
I repeated it, obeyed it, until I came to believe it
So when I stopped believing
When I knew I stopped believing
He was there, patiently
Bidding me to come back
Even as I rode through bliss
Rhythmically
Hair pulled back, the bed damp
Used condoms at the side
Breathlessly eating and being eaten out by
this man I just met
His piercing eyes, unflinching stare
****** me harder than anyone ever did
Guilt was my religion —
And I was His prodigal child
it has been awhile… hello again