My body has not once been a temple.
I remember years ago,
sitting poolside with my grandmother,
her spidery, veined hands touching my knee:
"Your body is a grand temple,
only those who are holy are worth admittance."
And her stern sincerity made me laugh.
My body is a wet, lush jungle.
My body has been trampled through and lived in.
Destroyed, burned,
yet always continues to rebirth itself from the rubble and debris.
Am I any less for this?
My body is a mystery,
a slow wafer on the tip of a school boy's tongue.
A dark, cool place to rest your weary head.
A place to let your feet press into the rich soil
and feel like maybe you can call this home.
I think one time,
a man with dark hair and light eyes thought he could
reduce me to mere trees and rain,
not knowing the jungle is not a safe place.
Unlike those with temples for bodies,
my heart lives deep in a hidden cave guarded with
sharp memories that feel like claws.
My memories have teeth,
and my heart has a brain.