The first time someone called me a poet it was in the cramped back hallway of a party in early July heat rising between our ****** spaces sweat collecting at the base of my brow to keep anxiety at bay I listen as someone who I could barely call an acquaintance describe me to a boy I just met: “she is an amazing writer, trust me, she’s so cool” As if me using metaphors for antidepressants and words as bandages for wounds was reason to make me worthy to get to know beyond my first name to pin my feet onto a pedestal I didn’t ask to stand on to begin with I press autopilot in my muscles, mechanically flip my hair, split my lips into a half-*** smile, ****** my hand, and let my laugh ring with the music. Little does everyone know I am the broken jukebox with a disappearing voice.
I hide behind love and at 19, I wrote “What High School History Taught Me” It was for you you, the NYU junior with a mouth that clung onto vowels and whose fingertips could read the braille embedded in my skin You loved chasing storms, I was almost named after a hurricane, and this was how we were born after Hurricane Sandy- it was never a question how we found comfort in destruction But I still remember telling you that I wanted to love you forever even if you didn’t stay to find out And ever since I spit that men come to me looking for their taste of mystery for their chance to be immortalized They don’t know I only speak in train station and everybody is always a few minutes too late No one has gotten the chance to get too close because it’s never romantic to **** the girl who makes love to her own sadness every night
I’ve stopped seeing the fire in my poetry like most strangers do because to them my pain is pretty my heartache is dressed in a bow so they can all sleep better at night knowing some 20 year old girl in California understands them better than she understands herself.
I have been singing in a language I never fully understood because I am the girl who attaches my reflection to a man whose memory I still keep prisoner in my mind and this is how I hide from myself this is my disappearing act
This isn’t poetry anymore and it hasn’t been for a long time This is the sound of survival This is my heart leaking gunpowder and discharging bullets Right here on this stage is where I understand what it feels like to choke on the gas chamber of lost dreams Right here is a dusky New York City apartment with a boy dressed in the mask of a man hunting me as prey This stage is where I come home to after being at war with myself This stage is my peace my prayer for forgiveness once a week Right here is why friends from school don’t call me that much anymore This stage is why me and Joe broke up This place is why I don’t sit with my family at the dinner table no more because why Why share grace with those who can’t understand how these lights I stand under make the full moon I need to break my neck and howl at some nights
This is where I pluck the guitar strings of my throat to sing like a bluebird and slow dance with every ghost This stage is the only place I can forklift all the misunderstood out of my chest and force you to watch and you will still call it art you will still call it poetry
But this isn’t poetry anymore it hasn’t been for a long time This is the sound of survival This is the sound of me using the inhale of night just to make it to the exhale of morning. Right here. On this stage. This is where and why I fight.