At times what a man can own Is a house, some land, a home A woman, a wife, his daughters But not his sons or his father
A man's voice is respected unless his pitch is too high Because a woman's voice seems just way too shy And a high voice sounds like a woman's: inferior Because all we are judged by is our exterior
He does not typically write sweet refrains He does not feel any monthly pains His feelings are for the inside He doesn't love, only shows pride
And how does he go on living thusly, Showing love, but only roughly? Where does he grow? Can he ever know That his own son's heart groans when he goes About spouting prideful privileged words? They attack me like preying birds
And I am the fawn, to whom no one belongs I am the heartbeat and the aching due to wrongs I am the taken aback by art I am the trembling of a heart
So then here I sit, so very distant from him Yet still a mirror image of him. With my chromosomes resembling his, I observe roses while he throws words like fists
He possesses objects even if they're humans He tells them what to do for his own amusement, Locking his heart far away until it becomes A fabled leviathan he keeps from his sons
Dear Patriarchy, how you've stolen my claim to normality! How your disadvantaging of others is an intrinsic reality! Keep your *****, dying hands away from me Your grasp forms almost everything I can see
I didn't want you upon entering this earth I haven't wanted you since the day of my birth But my rebirth has found me dying from what you do While you're slowly decimated, We all still die too