What do you want from me? I ask my memories, Wondering why they’ve come out to play, Tap dancing across the wood floors of me mind, Creating a cacophony that echoes off my skull. What do you want from me? I hear them when they respond, “We’re trying to make you safe.” I know they’re attempting to prevent tumbling off the same rocks, Trying to ensure I don’t crack bones on the same hard places. They are telling me to avoid having pieces of me stolen again. I couldn’t protect myself at thirteen or sixteen, So I stumbled down the same dark alleys until I was 18 And paid a grander price in an even darker cave at 19. I’m 22 now, and I’m still picking up the pieces out of the mouths of men, Men who cut me down until I was a conglomerate of bite size, fuckable pieces. I was taught not to scream when my pieces were being consumed. Who needs to be a whole human anyway? If tip money went into my pocket, If he told me he loved me afterwards, If I was alive to see the morning light, Who was I to complain? And when I stopped wanting to see the sun rise, They gazed upon my pieces And berated me for the wreckage. What do you want from me? Is a question I only know how to ask myself. I have never dared ask those who stole from me Whether they came to me in good faith, Never had the wisdom to lock up what was valuable. I have never demanded of anyone what their intentions were, So I ask again: What do you want from me? What am I expected to provide? Am I allowed to be a whole human here? Or will you require I be bite size again? I am desperate to be safe in the same flesh that once enticed those who hunted me. What do you want from me? I’ll tell you what I want. I want to go home whole, Knowing my skin is all mine.