Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Kay BellSeptember 18, 2020

Mother, I keep praying the parts of you
out of me   & yet you keep returning,

always wearing a secondhand dress
always fraught and wayward
always sunbathing in grief;

refusing to love any one island          or man.

& you know how hard I’ve tried to not disappoint you
           but how I’ve innately become a wound on the flesh     salted,

& how you have carried me like a knife on the tongue           twisting

& how each time I tried to say goodbye     it was your maternal glory
          that choked me

& then you couldn’t bear to love the one who reminded you                     of yourself,

& each time you tried    you were forced to recite prayers of your own:

Dear Lord, you have buried a gun in my womb    please    don’t shoot

More: Poems / Poetry

The latest from america

The common date of Easter 2025 between East and West can prompt Christians to reflect on what we all share.
The EditorsMarch 13, 2025
Syrian government forces are deployed amid heightened security in Damascus, Syria, Friday, March 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Omar Sanadiki)
The question asked by many Syrians from Alawite, Shiite, Druse, Christian and other minority communities has become: “Can [I] live in an Islamist country and not be [Sunni] Muslim?”
Kevin ClarkeMarch 13, 2025
I found I was playing the whole house,
Laura TrimbleMarch 13, 2025
And suddenly, without warning this long year of suffering comes back in fragments,
Gerald McCarthyMarch 13, 2025