Migrant ghost heartA Poem by Arnoldo GarciaA tribute poem to a woman who passed away.She is now just an idea, a deep memory an ancestor a sister a woman a ghost heart in my mind in my veins in my half life Her body was her own utopia she gave herself over to one man only gave birth to sons who married and had daughters and one son who she then raised because her sons became trapped in the delirium of their bodies -- and nothing else. Her body was overthrown by an uprising of cells brigades and divisions armies invading overrunning her body all organized by her beautiful blackened curly hair the uprising occupied her adulthood burned her body into all her sisterhoods occupied her five senses punctured her voice into silent curses deep pain, nails under the eyeballs, skinned alive pain The onslaught of cellular troops forced her to retreat to childhood where her father and mother where her sisters and brothers waited for her they were the fortress walls of tenderness of sweets and toys of being held in arms of being breast-fed of being rocked into cozy sleep under hand-made quilts and lullabies where the warm breath of her mother's wisdom pushed back the skirmishes, the ambushes and cleared the battlefields so she could live another day to live... She became all her sisters Her skin an impeccable wave her lips a crimson dance Her bones turned into glass She became the young woman again Until she became the girl of her own utopia. She would laugh at our jokes because it made her happy She would cook all the meals and served coffee because she knew hunger She attended to herself with the love she made because she knew what being loved did for her She offered herself without conditions... This music she hums and sits upright even though her bones have lacerated her flesh, gnawing away her laughter the shards of her bones skinning her eyes with barbed-wired tears Her body an incision of endless weight splitting apart the atomic meditation of the pain-killers into particles of song pushing her down into a bayonet of solitude shattering the vertebrae of her embrace She did not want to leave alone She refused. The invading armies shriveled Our mourning became her ally She would not leave alone. So her father came for her brought her a girly dress that she adored And then she left with resolve and unfinished love... © 2014 Arnoldo Garcia |
StatsAuthorArnoldo GarciaOakland--Matamoros-New York, CAAboutI write and scribble every morning over coffee, half- asleep, dreaming a different world or where all the other worlds come crashing in on the one that has me captive/captivated. I belong to many fami.. more..Writing
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