three questions __ xx
Tag: poetry
SOULMATE
| ˈsəʊlmeɪt | noun
- a person ideally suited to another as a close friend or romantic partner.
- a poetry collection for people that deserve more than i am able to give.
these poems are not named and i am not telling which is for whom. they are, though, glaringly obvious and transparent so guessing shouldn’t be hard.
(click here to read)
The wings of my eyeliner are sharp as knives,
my lipstick is the red of newly shed blood,
and the heels of my stilettos
are as tall as you say your dick is long.They tell me this is impractical attire
to wear when conquering nations.Oh, but darling,
how can you say this is not my battle armor?
You have missed my greatest conquest,
For I am already ruling the kingdom that is your heart.
You asked me once, mother “Why six seeds?”
I didn’t have an answer for you back than but right now I am staring at him and he is tracing out my name onto my hipbone with a smile and I think I’ve found your answer.
Why six seeds?
1. Because he handed me twelve. We both know that spitting out three or nine would not have been nearly so poetic and you always scoffed at my dramatics but it is because of my love for the symbolic that I am with you for half my time.
2. Because when he crawls into bed his feet are bare and bloody and mother, he cannot help it. Every path he walks down is drenched in the stuff. And mother, my hands, when I place them in his, my hands are just as bloody.
3. Because of the way he looks at me sometimes. Like he wants to chain me down and never let me see the light of day. Because he tells me that the way I look at him is even worse.
4. Because he taught me hunger when he pressed me to his bed and he taught me love when he let me leave his arms for yours. Because while you may hate the bruises he leaves me with, know that he lets me press double the amount into his flesh. Because he tells me that my kisses feel like dying and he smiles when he says it.
5. Because with you I was a princess. With you I was a daughter. With you I always trailed behind (you with your honeysuckle and rosebuds, me with my nettle and belladonna). And mother, with him, I am a wife, I am a queen.
6. Because mother, I hear that you created something called winter to terrorize the mortals with while I’m gone. I hear it’s cold. But, I want you to know that I spend those six months warm, curled up beside him and he traces my lips and feeds me food laced with sin and he whispers “my queen, my queen“ against my blood stained hands.
Mother, I wanted you to be the first to know. I made the right choice.
-From Persephone, To Demeter, By: L.D.
For girls who find themselves in the words of Meg Abbott
When I say girlhood I don’t think you understand what I mean
When I say girlhood I mean the color pink, not for it’s subtly, but for the fact that it looked like old blood stains on lacy sheets
When I say girlhood I mean the girl I loved holding my hand and spritzing vanilla and brown sugar perfume behind my ears
When I say girlhood I mean converse tennis shoes and the sharpie in my hand as I doodled flowers and skulls
When I say girlhood I mean flowers and skulls
I mean romanticizing abuse
I mean dragging a comb through my teased up hair
I mean being 13 and laughing at the idea of prostitution
I mean falling for a boy whose name and eye color I no longer remember
I mean cuts hidden under skirts and heating up bobby pins to press them to my skin
I mean wondering loudly in the halls about orgasms
When I say girlhood I mean disgust mixed with naive wonderment
I mean wide eyes and cruel words
I mean screaming at my father and enjoying the fact that I knew how to make him cry
When I say girlhood I mean learning the word lust from a girl whose father had pried apart her wishbone legs every other night
I mean learning the word ‘cunt’ from the same girl
I mean learning to cringe from every adult man I met
I mean looking away with a blush hoping that their eyes followed me
I mean hoping that their wives saw
I mean learning that the world is not so pretty, darling
When I say girlhood I mean harsh reality
I mean tampon and razors and the color pink everywhere
On our lips, on our cheeks, our dresses, our bed spreads, blatant on the mouths of all those who dared to take a bite out of us
When I say girlhood I mean don’t worry, baby girl you’ll be past it soon and one day you’re going to look back and you’ll write a poem about it
Baby doll, you’re going to laugh
The diary of a girl named tease
You are 16 years old and no one has yet called you beautiful
It does not matter much, you do not know yet that you long for the word
Cute is the best you are likely to get
You with your baby fat still in all the wrong places
You with your blood shot eyes and lank hair
You, little girl, who doesn’t even know what the word means
You are 16 years old and a boy wants to love you
You are 16 years old and a boy is whispering and kissing and forcing his hand into yours
You are 16 and this must be right
This must be the way that it goes
Romeo and Juliet were near to 16 weren’t they?
You smile because you’d like an ending like that
You’re 16 and you’re a child who knows how to romanticize all the worst things and you don’t know any better
You don’t understand the stories yet
You are 17 and you’ve been called beautiful
But it doesn’t sound quite right because the first time was never supposed to be from a girl, a being with skin as soft and supple as your own.
You with your heavy makeup
You with your high heels and books filled with poetry
You, somewhere in between drunk and high, reciting Sappho to her and wishing that she’d pin you down and turn you into some sort of twisted image of Jesus dying on the cross
You are 18 and the girl is long gone
You are 18 and your eyes are blood shot again
Your hair is long and you wash it with peppermint and coconut because you want people to remember how you smell long after you walk away
Your arms are weak from the books and a boy whose name you hardly know keeps sneaking up from behind and calling you beautiful and you think ‘Might as well’
Why not?
And so you dance with him and when he drops you off at home it’s long past midnight but you make like Cinderella and run before he can claim his kiss
You are 19 and every hungry homeless boy is calling you beautiful and every girl you see makes your stomach twist and your throat sore and you feel stuck in between what you want and what you need
Your hair is wild and falling haphazardly around your neck and your heels are loud against the floor and everyone will turn to watch you leave and this is what you’ve always wanted, right?
You are 19 with smudged lip liner and when a skinny boy who tells you that he doesn’t hate women like the rest invites you into a car, you go
When he slides whiskey down your throat you swallow
When he’s pressing you against the leather of the car seat you let him
You’re remembering that girl and how you had wanted her to pin you to a cross but now that it’s actually happening you’re wishing you could take it back
You are 19 and he has a strange look on his face and he’s calling you “pretty, pretty” and you wonder if he’d told you the truth before about hating women
You’re 20 and you’re writing poems for no one about Eve and Pandora
You’re 20 and your hair is short and your eyes are sharp and you smile bloody like Clemenstra
You laugh like Salome and you blush like Persephone and you’ve been writing the same story over and over but luckily they haven’t caught on yet
You’re 20 and you are getting mixed up on which Mary from the bible you identify with the most
You’re 20 and you realize that you’re probably older than they both were when their stories begun
You’re 20 and you tell the boys and the girls that you’re happy for them and sometimes you even mean it
You’re 20 and you’re kneeling in church and smirking through your prayers and you never meant to become this paradox, this combination of sinner and saint but you think that you may be alright with it after all
You’re 20 and you feel free to call others beautiful because you think that you’ve started to understand what the word means
Because you’re 20 and you realize that The virgin Mary was beautiful in the good way and Eve was beautiful in the sinful way and Helen of Troy was so beautiful that men fought a war to possess her and Salome was so beautiful that she could demand a king to kill for her
And you think you understand now that all of these girls were just that, girls
Girls who once were frightened of being called beautiful, because they knew what the world did to beautiful girls
Girls whose names we will always remember because they were beautiful and they knew it and they changed the world
You’re 20 and sometimes you mean this
You’re 20 and you look in the mirror and you declare yourself beautiful
–L.D.
dictionary poem ii by mica k
hainanxeon thanks for the word choice! 🙂
Traditional Celtic marriage vows, better than anything I’ve ever heard:
You cannot possess me for I belong to myself
But while we both wish it, I give you that which is mine to give
You cannot command me, for I am a free person
But I shall serve you in those ways you require
and the honeycomb will taste sweeter coming from my hand.But there’s more of it?
I pledge to you that yours will be the name I cry aloud in the night.
And the eyes into which I smile in the morning.
I pledge to you the first bite from my meat,
And the first drink from my cup.
I pledge to you my living and dying, equally in your care,
And tell no strangers our grievances.
This is my wedding vow to you.
This is a marriage of equals.This legitimately makes me want to cry. Perfect.
I found the last line.
“And beyond this, I will cherish and honor you through this life, and into the next.”
I’m crying
i have ended wars singlehandedly,
brought gods broken to their knees,
dragged the very lights of heaven
down to the sand,
but my greatest victory was always that
i was what sparked your smiles.
You are soft
like the bottom
of a long fall:
we mistake your
shape for
comfort,
we think,
“It must be better
than not being able
to see the end.”