while thumb thick in good intentions, i am beginning to think you never knew me as much as you think you did.
dear, tell me what has hooked your jaws into spouting out these pig tailed assumptions of me?
you see, i've never been quite as crisp tide white as they made me out to be. always a little fade to my denim. didn't you know some stains can't be washed off?
some fingerprints can't be dusted or steamed out in the dew of a 4 am shower. and sunday knows i've tried.
and still try to make it plainly clear that i left my mother's baby somewhere between the arms of brooklyn.
left her, all koolaid stained tongues tied to the push pop fantasies i'd held until i was about kush high to a grasshopper.
abandoned her pb and j sandwiched in an alley with a trash bag criss cross applesauce knotted around her lovely to keep her just as warm and naive as she never had been.
had you ever noticed the gauche in her grin wasn't nearly as golden as it should've been? and her paperback bone seemed to fold a tad too easily.
of coarse spines aren't meant to break like that but they do.
divorce and dysfunction has taught us that it all falls down someday so don't weep for the jericho in my bones but at least acknowledge that its there; that there are bruises too light to be convincing but they still ache when you stroke them right.
that some nights the pains of resurrection memories out shine those of the crucifixion.
certain skins must be shed when your convictions leave you broken and the stars you sin beneath begin to gossip about your shadow.
and your shadow finds its way onto the floor of living room while it watches you let yourself be made into one of the victims you write poetry for.
when you're trying to bottle God and grandeur into the barrel of the gloc your mother grabbed in anticipation of spilling herself in the wind when the wednesday's got too lonely.
listen stop trying to card me before accepting my truths. i've traveled too far for ****** to not assume i've been in the dark before.
drop my shell and see the inside mash called me has been spilled and shattered and reassembled and shattered and scattered and reassembled and splattered and bent more ways than i can yoga position myself in.
when you asked me how could a 17 year old know the pain of this world i wanted to tell you to roll up you sleeves and unzip your pride.
yes i am 17 but i know everything happens for a reason and i know being broken makes you grateful of the pieces that weren't obliterated.
i know you can't be flexible without stretching and i know how it feels to be stretched between 4 states two parents and 1 divorce signee.
i know what a blanket does for someone afraid of the shadows and i know you can't have shadows without light.
i know that florida fern leaves are consistently stormed on and never curse clouds for it.
i know i am beautiful and i know how many days it took me to find out.
i know i am made of those days and those days were born of a maker.
i know my mine met and got married and made me and my sisters and mistakes and i know they paid for them in cash and criticism.
i know my father is a good man and i know good men lie awake at 4 in the morning making plans to fix things.
i know my mother loves to laugh and i know laughter is the easiest way for her to cough up her worries.
i know she almost drowned on dry land before and i know she was one of the best swimmers in my family.
i know i am still learning but i've learned we know a lot less than we realize and feel a lot more than we recognize.