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Renaissance (Originally Spoken Word)

Sometimes I wonder

If when my parents first met me,

They spoke to God on bended knee

And said, "What on Earth is she?"

My mother's tongue loose

With the ever convincing persuasion

Of a more-than-her-share dose of medication.

My young father's frightened yet eager eyes,

Like getting a first glance at an unexpected surprise,

That you haven't figured out

Whether or not you can love yet.

 

And I was wrapped in the blanket

Of their nervous doubt-

But willingness to learn-

Presented to them though most showed concern

Over their lack of age and experience-

Of life.

 

I wish I had that moment in a bottle somewhere;

The electricity of their hope in me

Making waves on the air

And later as I wonder where-or why-

My mother hasn't shown up again,

Or how my father and I stopped being friends,

I go back there-to that moment-

And try to start all over.

When I picture my childhood;

not trying to weigh the bad-the good;

Just remembering.

 

When did I become this person?

When was the first time I tasted sin

Like a ripe fruit bursting in my mouth?

Was the influence of living in the South?

My grandmother waking me up too early

For grits at five in the morning.

Should my adolescent tirade against mosquitoes

Have been the first warning?

Was it before or after their fighting?

The birth of my brother merely highlighting

My parents' complete incompatibility.

Was it when I realized I was never unhappy

That they got divorced?

The fear of their yelling abated

By a court-approved mulligan.

 

When did I learn to lie?

Playing cruel jokes on my brother,

or holding him later as he cried over our mother

Not showing up again.

Which one was the real me?

Staying quiet as that boy slapped my ****

Laid me down, lifted my legs up, and said,

"Let's play house."

When was the first time I wanted to douse

Myself with gasoline?

Purge myself and

Emerge clean...

How did I start to hate myself?

And later, when I met my father's saving grace;

What did she see when she looked in my face?

An echo of my father's distance or

the shadow of my mother's abandonment?

Or did she see a blank canvas-

That she could paint her love on?

Where did I learn humility?

When did I begin my refusal of others loving me?

How did I learn to live?

Discover the strength in me to forgive?

When I lifted someone's face to mine,

And told them the only reason they were

Surrounded by the darkest night,

Was because they were the only star shining bright.

 

What made me push my family away?

My youngest brother not even getting

A call on his birthday;

My sister refusing to wilt in my absence,

like a wild rose-growing without a sister.

When did I realize I missed her?

How did I learn how to stand and be a woman,

With firm convictions that I can believe in?

And if I went back to that moment-now-

Back as far as my life would allow.

Back to that hospital-

Looked my parents in the face

And told them how I turned out,

Would they cry, scream out loud?

Or would they be proud?

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Written by
ashley-lynn-leblanc
American
Published
Apr 16, 2010
Lines·Words
85·546
Permission

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