There's something about paint That begs to feel skin Something about How smooth it is, How it can rise and fall in little dobs and smudges. Sometimes when it's very late And I am painting and my palette is a whirl of color I press my palms right into the middle of it Like a child And I settle them there, making sure every ridge and wrinkle is covered. When I pull back and see the design I always like my hands much better than before. And then I think Why stop at hands? I stand and strip off what clothing I'm still wearing And look at my body in the mirror, All white and shining in the dimness, a sliver of bone And I make it different with my hands. Handprints. I have always wanted to do it with a lover- To cover her in painted handprints and have her cover me, To wear the evidence of every place we touch In the colors that blend on our skin. Alone in the mirror, I place careful palms on my stomach, my legs, my *******, my shoulder. I do it until I like the dissymmetry of myself. I step back, And wonder why I feel that I look more natural like this Than bare. A tumble of black hair, a sheath of white skin, And on it Crimson Gold Azure Onyx Fiery orange and icy blue Poison green and violet Blood red and blushing pink All swirled and smudged, holding the shape of my fingerprints, And I am more me Than I was before. Later it will dry and crack like clay. Later I will shed it like a second skin, fascinated by its uneven splattering. It will slough off, painless and mesmerizing, and I will be what I was before- A sliver of bone. But for now I am a canvas, and tonight, for once, I have not been left Unaltered.