Friday, 5 February 2021

An open letter to my rapist

Bushra's birthday. 2018. She secured the whole of Fiction for her birthday party. I was there with a few friends and one of my lovers, watching the sunset from the Long Street balcony. Liquor flowed. We were dancing and dancing and there was your girlfriend on the dancefloor. Let's call her Dainah. I'm bi. She's bi. She had this huge halo of hair and we danced together. We kissed. It got saucy. At some point you joined us, tried to dance with us. I wasn't interested. She wasn't either. We ignored you made it clear you  weren't wanted there. You backed off. We made out some more and agreed that we should take it to the bathroom.

She pulled me by my hand into the women's bathroom. We were in the stall kissing. I thought you had backed off but I was wrong. You followed suit. You joined us in the bathroom. Who invited you? How did you know we were going to the bathroom together in drunken lust if you were not on the other side of the dancefloor preying after we rejected you the first time?

In the stall we were making out and you were there inconsequential. Watching, hands wandering uninvited. It's like you didn't exist. You didn't exist. I don't even remember how or when but it happened. BUT YOU FELT YOU HAD THE RIGHT TO BE A PART OF WHAT WE WERE DOING. Two queer women having fun and you felt you had a right to that pleasure. I don't care if she was your girlfriend or not. You didn't have the right to be there. Uninvited. 

It all happened so fast. I was drunk and confused and before I knew it you were behind me and had my pants down and penetrated me without protection and without my permission. It was so quick. I don't know what happened afterwards, I think she tried to stop you.  I don't remember much but I remember how I felt. The terror.

I couldn't make sense of it. The next few days I tried to construct a narrative that it could have been a threesome. But I didn't sign up for that. I didn't give you consent at any point. Now, two and a half years later, I know what it was, though. Plain and simple: rape. 

You two are still together. You have a kid. You probably didn't think twice about what happened that night. You thought you were entitled. You probably thought because I gave her my consent it automatically extended to you as her partner. You are wrong. You raped me that night and I need you to know that. 

I don't care how much you meant well, you are a rapist. You penetrated me and violated me without my consent without invitation and without protection. I hope you read this and it sinks into your conscience that you took something from me that day and that I had to suppress the trauma for two and a half years before it surfaced. 

I could give you a lesson in consent but I won't. All I hope is that you read this. And to Dainah I hope you know that you are married to a rapist. 


Wednesday, 4 November 2020

The Goddess

You hear their voices in the dead 
of night and retreat. Original 
sin so ingrained, you drown 
out their wisdom.

Sunken into the marrow of
your bones is their message.
Equally important, but
invariably unique. 

You close your eyes.
Drift into deepest 
consciousness. 

Eve's curiosity engulfs as 
you, yes you, bite into the
forbidden apple of a life
fully lived. 

Then, Ishtaar's fullness
surrounds you:
An existence pregnant
with joy. Rotund and
exuberant. Free and 
full.

This is only matched by Isis'
magic hand: healing,
tending, protecting. 
Growing and gifting. 

You feel Oshun's abundance.
You clench your thighs.
It lives in your hips:
sultry, sensual, sensory,
sensitive.

For the first time, you allow
yourself to feel that might.
A power that only Vashti's
resilience to resist to man
can balance. 

Man. Men. Who for millenia 
denegrated the Goddess 
(you).

Forgetful that if crossed,
you are both Kali and Medusa
- ash black and serpentine,
ready to strike. 

You remember that you can
cast flesh to stoney
death. And like Lilith, 
realise that you will not 
serve or subserve, but only
preserve (yourself).

Seraphic Sage

There is this feeling...
You know it well. The
hairs on your arms rise
one by one - like an ovation - 
and breathe a whisper 
down your back.

Your heart opens, in 
that moment it blooms.
You are one with 
the universe.

For an instant, all 
of existence is in 
sync with your psyche. 

Shhhh...

Don't think. Feel. You 
know it, as deeply, 
earnestly and truly 
as you know your 
own name. 

Like the creases of your
limbs, the prints on your
fingers: serenity is a part
of your seraphic essence. 

You, my dear, are holy. 

Ingest this, and remember:
The power that breathes you, 
will never leave you. 

Garden Heart

My morning meditation is a walk
through the garden of my heart 
as I ask the universe to show me 
her:
      The Divine Feminine. 

I construct, deconstruct and re-
construct through my thoughts 
and actions the idea of the wild -
woman.

Unkowingly, she comes to me. 

Increasingly, I see her in every
woman I meet. 

She is embedded in me.
I hear her in my mother's cackle, 
that's become my cackle, 
that's become my friends',
my sisters', my child's.

Wrestling with the present.
Sitting in it. Letting my 
intuition rise up like a flame
to warm and illuminate
the crevices in my chest. 

I pause. I feel joy. I think:
This can't possibly be 
reserved for me, for us,
for women. 

Then, like fog rising in the 
morning sun it dawns on me:

The divine feminine is 
in us all. She tends and observes
and is simply waiting for
us to give her a call. 

John Smith

What of this obsession with the colonizer?
I jog my memory, I run the hard-drive of 
my mind. My dad's voice ringing in my 
six year old ears: Call her Safia so that
her name is not a tongue-twister. 

Twisting whose tongue? Do I twist
their tongues now? Titillating, 
tempting, triumphant, truce. 
Sadistic seething. Sinister 
satisfaction. 

Desire me so that I can learn 
to love myself. No. Lay your
hands on me so that this emptiness 
is filled with something close
to the feeling of 
an existence. 

Wait. 

Think about that. Without the 
affirmation of your gaze, lust, 
eyes on my soul shifting face 
fleeting floating. I am stuck 
somewhere between the void 
and nothing.

Now tell me that colonization
brought boons? My bones
bereft of belonging.

Or maybe it is about possession
of power? For me. Pretty plight
pleaing to prey.

Wednesday, 27 May 2020

Freddie Prinz Junior

Let me tell you a story that makes my heart
    beat with intention.
Okay, I lied. I don't even know
                     if my heart beats anymore.
I actually think that it's drowning  -
          in the sludge of shame. I know that it
longs, though and I know that it feels.

I hear the crackling of the fire
   and remember the time I almost burned
the house down - alone in it. An involuntary
  suicide.
               Irony in the face of all those bottles of
                   pills.

Relief.
My belly sits on my thighs.
          The monk, she told me to relax it.
                                                          Let it hang.
           Breathe in and
                                                        let it expand.
           Breathe out and
                                                       let it contract.

How does that
          make you feel?
                                   You fatphobic fuck!
See, that's funny
         because it's usually:           fat fuck.
There is power in turning the words around.
There is power in words.

I'd be lying if I said I wasn't somewhat fond
        of the pain. I mean, my joy was stolen from me
the day I pulled the Freddie Prinz Junior poster
                                                         out of my locker.

Smothered by vacuous righteousness.
                      And the false promise of belonging. 

Tuesday, 26 May 2020

The Cox Phenomenon


Here it is again. The gallows of woman-
   hood - the debilitation which validates
the condition.

Someone tell me; does living through
  a pandemic give you license to breathe,
in the midst of those who cannot?

Or shall I shift the gearstick into neutral
  and roll into a pasture?

Maybe you'll drown with me at the bottom
  of the lake?

Like the time I read
       that we have just three minutes to live
but every time we breathe it resets the clock.

Wrap your head around such a fragile
    existence. And contrast it with the
woman born limbless
                                   who flies planes.
 

Saturday, 28 March 2020

Butterlies

Do you know what it's like 
To be ten 
And carry everything
Of meaning- 
Every type of love 
You could ever fathom 
Or imagine 
Or even recall 
Having experienced -
In a purse 
With you 

Shiny butterfly clips
Lady bug springs 
Glitter wings 

Taken away 
While you slept. 

Never to return. 
Except 
In a distant memory 

A childhood 
Vignette 
In the visage 
Of a mind 
That has grown
To be so sad.

But only from 
Time to time. 

Wednesday, 28 August 2019

The Politics of Body Hair

I stopped removing my body hair about three years ago. I think I've really taken this to the limit. I've regrown my monobrow. I don't shave my legs (unless I go to something like a wedding). My armpit hair is longer than most mens. My vagina looks like a ferret, but I think it's cute.

I can't tell you why I did this. I just had enough of paying ridiculous sums of money to wax. I did it as an act of resistance and as a fuck you to the patriarchy. Most of the time I'm happy with my decision, but often there is a hypocrisy I feel when I hear women talk about removing their hair.

I can't explain this. I know women must do what empowers them and what makes them feel good, but I often feel angry and repulsed at how the removal of body hair is normalised. I was listening to a podcast the other day and a muslim woman stated proudly that muslim women were the first to remove body hair. "It's a hygiene thing", she said. As a muslim woman I felt really fucking irritated. It's an understatement of the burden the patriarchy has placed on us to be vessels for what men find enjoyable.

I get a lot of flack for my body hair. When I take a new male lover I often worry about whether or not they will find it attractive. I had one lover tell me that he wouldn't eat my pussy because it was too hairy, and I have never picked up a razor so fast (I am not perfect!). I had another lover ask me if I considered myself a "natural" kinda gal, and I said "no, I wear makeup", and he said "but you don't shave", and I said "do you mind it?" and he said "it doesn't exactly get my dick hard, but it's alright I guess". And I spent the whole day wondering if I was automatic dick repellant.

My family hates it. My mother has come to accept it but she looks at me with disgust and disdain. When I visited my older sisters last Christmas they didn't shut up about it until I let them wax it themselves.

I follow lots of hair positive movements on instagram. I post a lot of photos of me with my armpit hair out. The response is mixed. Women hardly ever comment on it. Men do. And it's polarised. They either fetishise me with statements like "Hair good. I want lick armpit. Sexy amazon. Make sex.", or "You look like a man, that's disgusting.". I'm not here for the men. If I don't know them I would like to say that I don't give a fuck about what they think. But I do. Is this the condition of an empowered radical feminist? Why does it make me feel so dirty to have men say these things about me? Why can I really not just give zero fucks?

This post is starting to sound like a rant. I suppose I am lamenting the fact that in 2019 body hair on a woman is still a contentious issue. I just wish I could find a space where it is considered natural, and sexy and beautiful and I could come to my fullness in it without being made to feel self-conscious or worry about whether it may jeopardise getting my pussy eaten.

Do you grow your hair? If you do let me know how you feel about it in the comments.

XX






Thursday, 4 July 2019

Questions about divine orgasm

The female orgasm is something that mystifies most of the world. I am not above this group. In the last few years my sexual awareness has grown, but has generated more questions for me than answers.

In short I have found myself able to orgasm from no stimulation to my vagina or clitoris. Often I orgasm from nipple stimulation and french kissing. At other times from just being touched, on the arm, on the leg, on my belly, anywhere really. And at other times from not being touched at all.

Here's a little anecdote. I had a crush on a guy at work. He was (is) super steamy. One morning we went out for a coffee on the terrace. We were talking about unions and wages. NOTHING sexual. I was looking at him, and bam! I started orgasming. I had to cut the conversation short and run upstairs. I'm still shook.

I've told my friends about this and they always have questions. Is it the same sensation that arises from clitoral stimulation? Is it the same as an orgasm from penetrative sex? The answer is both yes and no. There is a release, there is tension in my vulva when it happens, there is deep pleasure, but it is very spiritual. It's not directly comparable, but there is no doubt about it: It's an orgasm.

I suppose I'm writing this because I'm stunted by it. I want to know if other women and men experience this type of energetic orgasm. I have friends who definitely come from nipple stimulation, so that one is sorted. It is more common than you think. But I have yet to meet someone who can come from no physical stimulation whatsoever.

I've read about it. Most of my reading has led me in the direction of tantra and kundalini energy. Kundalini energy is basically the opening of one's base chakra. I resonate with this but it still doesn't explain why it happens. It's just some mysterious "awakening" and that's it. Tantra seems to be more of an active practice. This doesn't resonate because I haven't been actively trying to awaken anything sexual within myself.

This morning I was meditating and midway through I started orgasming. In my meditative state I chose not to indulge it, but just to observe. I managed to let it go and the sensation stopped. But afterwards I was astounded at this ability that my body has. Something has shifted. And when I think about sex now, I yearn for, more than anything, just to indulge the spirituality that comes with this kind of orgasming. It feels divine. It feels like I am connected to the earth. It feels wholesome.

I feel the sensation in my vulva. But also in my being. In my belly there is an excitement. For it. For life.

Anyway, I am writing this blog because I have more questions than answers? Is there anyone out there who can explain why this happens? Are there any other people who its' happened to?

If you have some intel. Do share.

In pleasure.

x

Thursday, 28 March 2019

Cults and Shame: A short memoir.

It's been a while since I put pen to paper. But this morning I woke up with the urge to write. As if I knew I had something important to say. Over the last few months, I have been taking a break, from work, from structure, from life. In this space, my psyche decided that it was time I come to terms with a few things. And in this process there is one word that sticks out. SHAME.

Before I get to what it is I have so much shame over, I want to discuss a little bit of what shame does to a person. To me, shame is an intense form of embarrassment with an overarching need to hide parts of oneself due to fear. Fear of being judged, being perceived as weak, and fear of being socially rejected and shunned.

I have been sitting with a lot of shame recently, and found myself needing to use social crutches such as alcohol and cigarettes to drown the shame. Then, I realised, that these coping mechanisms (surprise, surprise) only serve to intensify it.

So here, I am, sitting down behind my computer, trying to confront it. I love that I write under the skin-thin"pseudonym". It gives me a false sense of safety. I find solace in it, even though I know whoever will read this post will know exactly who I am. Anyhow, tucked under the comfy blanket of indoafrikanqueen, here goes:



Most people who know me have heard a standard narrative of my life. I grew up in "Joburg", am a child of divorced parents, and attended a muslim "boarding school". This isn't entirely true. Let me elaborate. I lied.

This is the truth. When I was seven a strange man came to the house of my great aunt that my sister, my dad and I lived in. He whisked my sister and I away for the December holidays to a house in Rynsoord, a little Benoni suburb. And we never left (aside for holidays) for ten years. This house, was in fact a children's home. And housed, what I now realised, was nothing short of a Muslim cult.

I have never been able to admit this to anyone. I was ashamed. I am ashamed. When I got to UCT everyone was so elite and privileged that I couldn't bear that they knew the truth of my existence. Now, everyone is working, has jobs, and the people I know are arguably even more elite so that admitting where I am from entails risking all the social capital I have built for myself over the years.

If you're still reading, which you may not be, let me tell you a little about the home I grew up in now. This cult. It was for underprivileged girls from muslim homes, funded by the Muslim community and run by a muslim couple from Benoni.

On the surface the home looked beautiful. Tucked away in a neat suburb on any old suburb road next to ordinary people in ordinary houses. But on the inside things were not so.

To start, we had to wake up at 5 a.m to pray, we had to go to Muslim school, pray at school. Come home by bus and sit in extra-curricula madressah classes, then pray again, eat, pray again, do homework, pray again and go to bed. We weren't allowed to read after 9 p.m at night. We weren't allowed to play outside, we weren't allowed to see outside the gates of the premises - they were sheathed in canvases of zinc. I was seven when I arrived and I brought a few of my barbie dolls with me - cute little cheap things covered in crocheted dresses picked up at a second hand store in Boksburg - these were confiscated.

As a child you have no concept of time. I don't know how the first four to five years passed but I remember sneakily playing games with girls my age, by building forts under beds, and sneakily reading in the light that filtered through from the street after 9. One afternoon we played after classes and I fell asleep under the bed, I missed evening prayers and was awoken by the housemaster dragging me out from under the bed and bestowing a fat full-palm smack on my face. I never played again.

Nonetheless, I was a good student and spoiler alert, this turned out to be my saving grace. My coping mechanism. To this end, I got an award in grade three, that was made specially for me, because my reading capacity was that of a grade eight learner. This award was not standard.  I mastered the Quraan. There was a period I thought I would memorise the whole thing and become a Hafizah.

The home was lonely. I was just a number. One of eighty girls, between six and nineteen and was given no emotional support at all. My dad was abusive, and an alcoholic when I was admitted to the home. My mum was not in the picture. Absent.

I remember getting sick around the age of nine, and suffering with night sweats, fever and the shakes. I just got up and went to school. I felt so ill but didn't know that I was. This continued to when I started menstruating, I suffered with extreme cramps and not once took a painkiller for it. I think the first time I realised I could remedy my pain with a painkiller was when a girl at school gave me one in grade 11, six years after I started menstruating, and it worked miracles.

The shame is all encompassing.  I was completely under-nourished and had to bury my pride and ask the girls at school who were not from the home for lunch because I was so hungry. I developed an eating disorder, constantly deprived of food. And the food we did get was of such a poor quality, it was barely edible. The meat would often be purple and the rice would be stodgy. A lot of the time I would be starving but just could not eat.

Music was forbidden as were movies. The punishment in the afterlife for listening to music would be hot lead being poured down your ears. Your grave would close in on you to the point that your ribs would intertwine.

As you would expect, a lot of the girls at the madressah behaved recklessly. They were naughty. We were neglected and often times verbally abused. At the age of nine I got told that I had too much pride and had to be "put in my place". I was told my mother is a whore, and that she forgot about me. I was told that I thought too much of myself in my teen years, because I was light-skinned. My friend Aisha, was told that her mother was in jail because she was caught playing outside at dusk when she should have been praying.

There was no solace. I was deeply distressed and depressed but did not know it. My parents were irresponsible. At the start of the school holidays, I would sit at a window upstairs and wait for my dad to pick me up. He wouldn't show up until two or three days later. And if I didn't have my report (sometimes the school did not release it) he would beat me.

I knew nothing of the internet. I did all my school assignments by encyclopedia. Many of the pages were ripped out or scribbled on. Still, in grade twelve, I wrote a history essay that one of the heads of department in the local department of education said was one of the best history essays they ever read.

My teachers saved me. I was in flight or flight. All I had was my brain and by some divine measure I knew it. I threw myself into my books. The teachers at school were sub-par. My mathematical foundation was exceptionally weak, so weak that my maths teacher advised me to do standard grade maths. I refused. He saw my potential eventually and gave me free after school tuition to help me get through. I just missed an A at the end of matric. I wish I could track him down now and tell him that I have two master's degrees with distinction, one in mathematical economics.

When I hit puberty, I was constantly propositioned for marriage by men in the muslim community. They promised me wealth and to "allow" me to study. I declined. I didn't have a boyfriend until I left school, yet I was on all the slut lists that circulated. I had no mother to confide in about this. I internalised it. I radicalised myself. I believed that being a good muslim would save me.

Then the molestation started. Not me. I wasn't molested. But the "housemaster", let's call him that, molested a number of girls at the home. I can't prove it now. But I believed all the girls who independently said that he did it. And he admitted it to one girl who was not a victim, to her face.

There were girls who got pregnant, and lawyers were brought in to do the paperwork, for these minors to give their babies up for adoption. This was all unethical.

One afternoon, I wrote a letter to a friend who lived around the corner from the home and sent it to her with another girl. The letter was intercepted. It said this: "Hi girl, I'm really hungry. Can you send me a cheese roll please?". They called my father. He sat in the office for an hour, where they told him they didn't know what to do with me anymore. They then called me in, and left me alone with him. I was twelve. This was a home for girls from broken home, they knew he had an abusive streak. My father asked my what happened, what the letter was about, and I said nothing. He was so riled up at this point that he pushed me off my plastic chair, picked it up and broke it to pieces on my head.

My head split. I don't remember much of what happened thereafter. I came too in a small dingy practice, where a doctor from the muslim community shaved and stitched up my sculp. I have a scar the size of a palm where this happened, and it aches until today. I was never taken to the hospital or for an x-ray. Never tested for a concussion. I got back to the home, the porch was covered in blood. It wasn't cleaned. I stayed away from school for two weeks and not once did anyone mention the incident ever again. I was gaslit.

In conclusion I suppose I grew up in a cult.

And I am ashamed.

I could tell you many more stories about it but I'll stop here. I suppose the reason I am writing this is to reconcile it for myself. To find some power in writing this down so that I know it was the truth. It is the truth. To teach myself not to be ashamed. To let people in this elite circle of society I am in know that we didn't all get here because we were born into it. I was never believed when I told people this as a child, but I do hope I will be believed now. More than this, I hope that the people who read this check their privilege. Especially those from stable homes and present educated parents.

When I was in grade eleven, my history teacher, who was the principal of the muslim school I attended, not affiliated directly to the home, saw potential in me. He promised me that if I produced six distinctions he would help me get into the university of my choice. I chose the one furthest from that life: UCT. I got six distinctions, easily. I missed math, but got six. And I made it, but not without obstacles.

When the housemaster found out that I was getting a scholarship to study he tried to stop it every way he could. He called the principal and told him that my mother would pay for my studies and that I was trying to extort money from the school. Little did he know, the principal and I formed a kinship. The principal called me and I told him that this was a blatant lie.

This failed, and the housemaster knew it. So for the last month of my stay in the home, he terrorised me. I was so afraid of him that I locked myself in my room and barely went out for a month. Exams were over but I could not be released until term ended. I was so afraid. But I made it.

I left the home. My mother took me in as my dad had no house and no money. She insisted that I do not study. She actively discouraged me from it, not believing that I could get a scholarship. It was four weeks before she had enough of me and sent me to Cape Town to stay with an aquaintance in January of 2008. UCT only started in February. I had no home, and no friends. I knew no-one.

In February I walked onto UCT's campus with a full scholarship, and I wish I could say the rest was history but it was not. I struggled to adapt. I didn't know simple things - pop culture references, the names of restaurants or medication, music, movies, what wikipedia was. I struggled. Alone.

I fought. I made it. I graduated. Did a master's, did another one in the Netherlands, all by the age of 23. But still I suppressed this story. In either case, now I am here. The knock on effects are depression and anxiety. But it is eleven years later and I am starting my doctorate. No longer religious, but saved. By education. And one day at a time, tackling the shame.


Sunday, 14 October 2018

Gordon

You entered into
           my life
on the face of a
           warm breeze

and unfurled me. a
         flower in the
midst of spring. Opening
         to the gentle touch
of the moon.

a shrubbed field. yellow.
         dotted. full. bare and
open to the sun.

therein, my spirit
         lay
               dormant.

awaiting the touch
         of your soul
                to awaken.

Sunday, 1 July 2018

Mariana


              I

Two continents apart
we met on a third 
      By chance. 

I snuck in front  
    of her in the airline
queue and gave 
   her my most sheepish
                smile. 

forgive my impatience 
    my eyes said. and she
obliged 
   by graceful ignorance.

I thought I would 
   never see that 
boyishly beautiful 
  face again.

Then, in wet Malay air
 we found ourselves
outside sharing a
           cigarette.

A car ride later, 
 against the backdrop of tall palms 
her asymmetric earrings only
 set off by her loose 
slacks, soft leather brogues and the tattoo
    - of an arrow- 
         on her left arm.
Something inside me came alive.  

               II

 Her eyes: dark cherry brown.
 fuzzy milk
        chocolate hair. 
She was full. All cream
               all richness.

               III

We arrived. Do you have a partner?
   she or I
asked,
   I don't remember. But I 
answered: "No, but I do go both 
ways." "So do I."

          An affirmation.

               IV

Over days, she shared her
  cigarettes with me 
The burn in my throat
  only reflecting 
 how I burnt for her.

She, so sensitive in her
    sacred,
     wicker constitution.

                V

One dark night (The Godess
only knows how we got there, bless her)
          we lie on a bed...
   desire tangible in the air.
Like smog.
my head against
        the pillow, hers at the end
of the bed. She leant (or was it leapt?) forward
 and kissed me.

      Cherub lips
all petals 
     and wet tongue on
peach down.

               VI

Touching her was
   touching a
 white
          flame. 

Which only burnt
brighter when
 I bathed her 

lathery hands 
slipping over
 breasts naturally onto
              the unashamed 
                   convexity of hips,
              soapily and gently
   grazing her crevice.

               VII

Seeing her naked was 
   an apparition. 
Tall
        broad
                 all incurvate.
 I burnt more.

The image
of her naked body
         from behind
               smoldered
    into my mind.

             VIII

Hot, Dewey and Fast:
 we lit each other up
at our apexes.
       all stone churning friction against stone
                 pestle and pestle at ends 
                 and lips brushing and buds pulsating
Reverberating.

Legs slit, scoring and intersecting 
         incising until our silken
                  liquids were one. 

    Then,
I ate - there is no other way to put it - 
   tenderly, greedily, at 
      her Corsage orchid. 
So vigorously, with such hunger,
                                       such thirst, that
At times I almost couldn’t bbbbreathe. 

She pulsed
      under me
        (into me.) 

Legs spread wide
     with my full 
         bristling bulb 
at her juncture
   she opened her 
  lungs and 
                   sang
                the 
                         song 
that brought her home. 

               IX

it was my turn. 
   Oh Goddess.
 she was soft.
  so hard.

in drunken splendour
it was everything.

       it was nothing but
the flame burning bright.

               X

She was.
               Is. 
Full woman. 
                    Mariana. 



Tuesday, 26 June 2018

Shore

Come closer.
    Breathe.
It is in  your breath
 that you tend.

Engulf me,
  like the waves
lap the shore.

Give, but not,
  too much.

Because, like
  the sand,

i can't retain.

Jason

He came into me,
    tall, phallic, lean,
beauty-FULL. beautiful.
BEAUTIFUL.

he left. quicker than
  he came. yes I mean,
like, during sex.

He indented my psyche,
  dented it. knocked it
in.
    knocked me in.
every fucking time.

and now, all I have
 left is the cavern.

regret is a word,
  only left for the
impulsive,
  obsessive,
     self-giving,
                                empty.

The Chapters Will Write Themselves

words drip from
         my fingertips
and slip off my
         tongue onto
the pages of my
         life, that I
keep writing
     and t-trying to
     rewrite

there is no eraser.
  no backspace, no
     delete. only
margins for error,
     pages for them;
                  of them.


they can, at best,
   be reduced to
              footnotes.
but what if I
   wanted them to be
a chapter?

The chapters will
     write themselves.
word by word.
     space by     space.

breath by
               baited
  breath.

inhalation. exhalation.
fullstop. comma.
              ellipsis...

they'll neatly fold
 over
when complete

and ever so gently,
   or maybe sometimes
with a ____jolt
start anew.

the chapters, love,
   will write
                  themselves.

Wednesday, 7 March 2018

Half a crescent

When it's been
       about half a
        crescent of
         a moon

and you're thinking
       about a fort-
         night ago

already reminiscing.
        It's time to let
                 go, baby.
        It's time,
               to let go.


Tuesday, 30 January 2018

I promise you -
  it will lift
    it will lift
     it will lift.

The smog will
  separate. and
light will seep
  through.

Darkness will
 slowly but surely
turn to light.

You will wither
  and bloom.

Friday, 19 January 2018

Moon Sisters

Birthing bone.
  Crown of strength. 

Fully fledged maleficent
    Woman

The moon.

We hold each other 
firm.
    Strong

Blood sisters

At the start
    of the only month
I've come to
    __understand. When
I don't long for
     any lover's touch

you crawl into
    my bed and
surround me
  with your warm
                   hea(r)t

taking the blood
      that br/
                 eaks
from me and
           building
a bond
        eternally strong.

You, are my
reinforced
              lining,
  blood-line
of my choosing.
           my kin.