That Boys Are Flowers Too
Say, earth has become too busy
tending to sister's scars
that my cries are only gifted
to the cicatrix and night skies.
You see, father's father had
encrypted on our tongues—
the constitutions on how a boy
could camouflage his agony with
the mask of a lion's heart that
he had forgotten how petals
had already been sewn into flesh
and ichor for our hearts instead.
He says a boy must recycle his grief
into boxes of peaches and fondle
them as though he were a deity—
without sin.
But i tell you, if you choose to
unwrap this flesh you'd see
the anatomy of pain from a boy's body.
And when you swallow my grief
you could find its definition in
a thousand and one languages.
You see, the scars on mother's body
teaches girls how to love
but father's burnt limbs whispers to us,
Man shall always be man.
And the night I sang to dad
how i dreamed of becoming a fire lily,
the old man asked that I exorcise my tongue.
Boy— you are vine.
You are a ghost orchid too.
Your petals have blended into
the satin of crooked minors,
'home' might weed off your bloom.
In this poem, my body lives without a tongue
when i fall into the darkness of reality
i see,
a girl's portrait on the altar of helplessness.
This portrait is pleading, this portrait is me.
But an old man pulls my tongue
from my mouth.
he says that girls my age must lock
their voices inside their father/lover/husband's lips.
then i try to pull my pale body
out of this vulnerable realm
and write to mother how i lost my voice to a strange man.
she stares at me with so much to say but
mother's tongue has been taken too.
listen,
in this polity where every woman
is believed to possess a disabled gene,
i do not know the difference between a nightmare and reality
for as long as i carry this body i remain
that girl child without red.
Powerful poems with moving imagery.