Even When You’re Here

language fails to express
the most profound darknesses of the heart–
the small cracks between the fertile soil of the
soul where only God goes.
There is no one where I am,
seeing through these eyes or
hearing through these ears, or
feeling the darkness in my stomach.
In all that I am,
I am utterly, darkly, alone. 

Space Boy

you were my space boy.
i didn’t see that you were light
years away because i was
transfixed by the nebulas in
your eyes.

you were my space boy.
i didn’t mind that your kisses
came through the arms of
reaching stars, because they
tasted like the Milky Way.

you were my space boy.
it didn’t matter to me that you
only touched me with your fingertips,
because I loved hearing about
what the earth looked like
through your helmet.

you were my space boy, but
i tried to ignore the fact that
there wasn’t room for me in
your shuttle–
that all those stars must make
my eyes seem so dim.

you were my space boy, but
it is hard to love
a space boy when there are
heavens between
infinity and earth.

Winter’s Kiss

There are strawberry fields between your knuckles
that crack and bleed when you close your fist.
But you won’t wear gloves, you won’t wear mittens;
you say you love the winter’s kiss.

Even when the rest of the world has hidden
underneath the frosty snow and ice,
you stand outside with your arms wide open
and tilt your head up towards the sky.

Though your hands and legs are red and numb
and the snow and sleet begin to fall
you won’t come in until you’re frozen
because then you cannot feel at all.

4/24/1915

i think I was born with
the taste of their blood in my mouth;
their story intertwined with mine 
long before i was old enough
to start writing it.

the word genocide 
passed down through generations–
an unwanted inheritance
laying heavy on our lips and 
etched into the lines on
our palms. 

a word small enough to hold
in the palms of your
hands holds the history
of a nation.
a word comprised of the lives
of 1.5 million, written in sets of
footprints in desert sands.

we are a people defined
by genocide
we are the generations born
from the blood spilled before
us– a people who will fight to
have their history
bloom bloody red 
with a stem of thorns. 

their battle, 
their blood, their lives 
are now ours. 
There is no their
We are our

Hitch Hiker

One day
my heart skipped a beat
and I realized you’d made your home
in the caverns between my ribcage.
You treaded on my heart
while it was still soft,
skimming your hands along
the white walls.
You filled
the empty space,
you left nothing
untouched. 

Blood Is Proof I’m Still Alive

At dinner parties, my parents still laugh
and tell their friends about how
I used to bite my toenails as a child– as if
it is cute that my fingernails and cuticles constantly
resembled a war zone. As if
the fact that a four year old had enough anxiety
to resort to biting her toenails
once her fingernails ran out, was funny.  

Five thousand eight hundred and forty three days later,
the skin around my thumbs has learned how to heal
when it is uprooted from it’s home.
Five thousand eight hundred and forty three days later
and I’m sitting in this chair, small flakes of my skin accumulating
on my thigh. I try and hide them,
brush them off onto the floor.
Five thousand eight hundred and forty three days later
and she asks, Why
do you pick your thumbs?
and I think: To feel something. 

Because bloody thumbs
are a lot easier to brush off
than the scars on your inner arms.
Because you can pick your thumbs
without having to discretely pack
blades and gauze pads and tape and bandages
in your backpack.
Because you don’t have to hide
in a bathroom stall between classes
just to feel something. 

Some days the anxiety
is so bad my fingerprint
reader on my phone cannot read
my thumbs.
Some days my fingers are so raw
I cannot hold
my pencil without cringing. 
Some days my fingers look
like they’re wearing bugle hats. 
Some days my nail beds are
a war zone. 

I’m picking at myself to feel something
because being numb isn’t enough to prove I’m alive. 

Anchor

Our love was the way we hugged when 
we said goodbye: 
two anchors, with limbs tangled
we jumped into the sea
knowing, yet ignoring the fact that
we were drowning each other,
we were killing each other. 

I loved you because your lungs were filled with water, too, 
until I realized
I didn’t want to drown anymore. 
I shed the skin you burned
with your fingertips, 
and ever so slowly rose to the surface,
my lungs bursting with the anticipation
of air. 

You’re Still Replaceable

Before you pride yourself on being so hard
for me get over, remember that you broke the heart of a girl
who: falls in love with
sticks and leaves, and keeps her favorites
in the backseat of her car. 
cries at crimson sunsets. 
tiptoes around insects on the 
sidewalk. 
feels too much and not enough. 
sees beauty in everyone 
but herself. 
does not understand the concept of loving
halfheartedly. 
jumps in puddles and digs 
her toes in the mud.
lies in the middle of the street at night
just to feel her heart race. 
was never taught how to 
put herself first. 

You broke the heart of a girl with emotions like
rain drops in a torrent, 
an ingenuous heart that still hasn’t learned 
that hardening is much safer. 
A girl reckless enough to tear open 
the stitches, to risk bleeding out
to love you. 
You sawed through the tissues
that never had time to congeal. 

You’re hard to get over because
I opened my wounds for you, and 
every time I pick my scabs, they take 
a little longer to heal; they leave
a deeper scar.