I sit by the window on a Saturday morning with nothing but a cup of tea in my hand. I was too late to watch the sunrise, so instead I watch the way the flowers blow in the wind painting streaks in the canvas of the sky. The incessant scratching of a coin against a lottery ticket burrows into my mind. My inner voice shouts over it, just to remain in control filling up my head, pushing out my thoughts and threatening to explode but perhaps it is too late. The scratching already comes from within. It reminds me of the time I scratched my arms raw after my mother told me no boys would like me if I kept hurting myself. Just like the time my mother told me that I could never make it as a poet.
I redirect my attention to the window trying to focus on what I want to see (is that what they tell you to do in therapy?) Unfortunately, I had already wrung every drop of poetry Out of this humble garden. Back in the kitchen, my mother stands up, and I notice the scratching has stopped. Instead, the sharp and familiar sound of ripping paper fills the air. I am reminded of all the poems I had ripped to shreds to start anew as she curses and throws the ticket in the trash, dramatically slamming the door. A selfish part of me is happy that she didn’t win. Because I know that if she did, she wouldn’t hesitate to do the same to our lives.
Relocating us to a place where flowers and fountains are found in rows like fresh cuts on an arm and not in haphazard paint splatters like stars in the sky, or freckles on a face. A grand white mansion, elegant as a mausoleum, where the sound of scratching and early morning yelling and late night sobbing would echo through the empty rooms bouncing from wall to wall until the house threatens to fall apart. Or else, we would be on a plane, to some far off destination, Sitting all in one row and shielding our phones from each other, thinking how much better it would be to sit amongst strangers.