sometimes, i look at dainty strong marble effigies of the ****** mary holding her birth-bloodied son and wonder if some loves aren't meant for everyone.
chastity-locked inside my heart, there's a woman who wears long sundresses and lives in the little mac and cheese potluck moments; she prays her rosary and feels the warm arms of her traditional husband who loves her as a duty.
as for jesus, well, he's a cheap plastic figurine she bought from ebay and stuck on the dashboard of her car; the heat melted his feet in a crucifixion of 2020 but he still stands, wobbly and shaky and commercialised. when she travels, she prays to him for safety.
(she doesn't travel a lot. she's happy to be stagnant and pray for still waters every morning.)
who cares about my heart, though? who loves unconditionally and always, and sees through the rips of cartilage and crushed aorta - who will look and look and look and see me? sorry, see me? sorry, see me out.
sometimes, i want to be a child again; cradled in my mother's arms. sometimes, i want to no longer put my dreams on hold. sometimes, i want the world to look at me and say "hey, pontius pilate, there's another one for martyrdom."
something something catholic guilt and childhood dreams of fame