Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
“Well if the shoe fits.” And it never does, either too tight or too loose, with my paint-thinner feet, narrow, knifing through the canvas heels flopping out at the back toes mashing together at the front, pacing between shelves at the store, growing anxious mom impatient in the waiting chair, shifting between sizes, walking prison-style with shoes zip-tied, a second, third opinion, salesclerk gets out the foot measure, I take my socks off, put them back on (are they too thick/too thin?) feet either mashed or cavernous if the salesclerk crouches down and presses a thumb at the end and gives me an okay sign I’ll walk around with ****** toes and bruised heels the rest of my life because only others can convince me what my body truly feels because mental illness is impalpable and therefore unbelievable and broken bones and black eyes will perpetually surpass what lingers in my troubled mind for I know not what the body wants (it’s *** I think) no, I don’t know how it’s supposed to act, or feel, so I can let someone else decide for me, as I let mom order my Happy Meals, and buy my clothes she picked out, and tell me what kind of girls I like, and make my doctors’ appointments, and file my taxes, and pay my bills (I just give her the money), and I am convinced my body and mind do not exist on the same plane, and whatever signals they send each other I render skewed and the messenger disabled and tonight I told mom the shoes I’ve worn for five days straight don’t fit and my feet hurt and she sighs and laughs simultaneously alongside the family as she hands me the number to the store and I halfheartedly wish she’d make the call or lean down and press a thumb to the end of my shoe and convince me it fits. --Home, August 19, 1:41 AM
0
Aug 19, 2016
Aug 19, 2016 at 2:21 AM UTC
If the Shoe Fits
“Well if the shoe fits.” And it never does, either too tight or too loose, with my paint-thinner feet, narrow, knifing through the canvas heels flopping out at the back toes mashing together at the front, pacing between shelves at the store, growing anxious mom impatient in the waiting chair, shifting between sizes, walking prison-style with shoes zip-tied, a second, third opinion, salesclerk gets out the foot measure, I take my socks off, put them back on (are they too thick/too thin?) feet either mashed or cavernous if the salesclerk crouches down and presses a thumb at the end and gives me an okay sign I’ll walk around with ****** toes and bruised heels the rest of my life because only others can convince me what my body truly feels because mental illness is impalpable and therefore unbelievable and broken bones and black eyes will perpetually surpass what lingers in my troubled mind for I know not what the body wants (it’s *** I think) no, I don’t know how it’s supposed to act, or feel, so I can let someone else decide for me, as I let mom order my Happy Meals, and buy my clothes she picked out, and tell me what kind of girls I like, and make my doctors’ appointments, and file my taxes, and pay my bills (I just give her the money), and I am convinced my body and mind do not exist on the same plane, and whatever signals they send each other I render skewed and the messenger disabled and tonight I told mom the shoes I’ve worn for five days straight don’t fit and my feet hurt and she sighs and laughs simultaneously alongside the family as she hands me the number to the store and I halfheartedly wish she’d make the call or lean down and press a thumb to the end of my shoe and convince me it fits. --Home, August 19, 1:41 AM
jarjarrhine
Written by
Aug 19, 2016
Aug 19, 2016 at 2:21 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem