Before I realized my mother's
disease was mine; my brother's-
(first blood shared
but not diluted)
I thought
all orchids were white.
We bathe
in separate pools;
tributary veins
destined for
the same
large body
of water.
My mother sees
visions, electronic
voices, walls of rooms
the size of heaven-
not wide enough
to accommodate
her wing span.
My brother arranges
shoes, leather
according to shades
of evening. Rehearses
his prayers
to the stain
of black orchids.
I gather blossoms,
consider the color
of their skin
and reinvent
them.
1 comment:
(you are the best paper poet out there right now)
(period)
(and that applies whether or not you chose to accept it)
(you are everything i aspire to be as poetry, but fall so desperately short of)
(and my poems are fucking good)
~
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