I was obedient, a dim beam
from a frayed wire, never
alight. I was the finest void,
listening to my mother sing
about Diane sitting in Jack’s lap.
She talked to herself,
sobbing when she couldn’t answer
her own questions. I tried to be
a good unwanting, a quiet thing
a collapsed lung. At night,
I bit my nails down to the quick
staining my sheets with dotted blood.
I uncover my voice, my tongue
filling my toothed gap. I speak
to my reflection & ask
her to be the brightest light.
Kiyanna Hill (she/her) is a Black writer. Her work can be found in Porter House Review, Honey Literary, Autofocus, Peach Mag, and elsewhere. Her debut poetry chapbook, A Damned House and Us In It, is forthcoming from Variant Lit.
I wrote a post recently called ‘Cultivate the Strangeness’; this post, the writing, made me sit up and pay attention. It is so distinctive: the imagery is striking —
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