Tuesday, January 21, 2025

teenage mother

I was born to the tired arms of teenage mother 

her red hair a shelter over amniotic-soaked curls

we two met in dream- years long before my conception

I a wish a want a dream a hope


mama, seventeen, tired, met me with joy-tinged regret

a vessel of sorrow she had ever been and was yet still 

this not to change in birth, in life, not even in her death

twenty-two years later with mind awry and heart adrift


mama and I, loved and abandoned by cruel hands of man

selfish to want us, to have us! somehow refusing to keep us


long have I been a daydream, a wish, to those around me

full of potential and hope for their futures, their pride, their wants

when ever have I only been me


me! with my towering anger, lording over the gardens of my sorrows

me! me! with conflict!

me! with curiosity!

long have I only and ever been me in my wealth of humanity!


imperfect child, always, from moment of conception 

born not to be perfect but to be loved

born not to be revered but to live!


father, I did not know in my nights of grief and sorrow 

now dreams of my becoming

becoming beautiful! becoming accomplished! becoming a vision to behold!

dreams of my becoming a daughter he may herald with pride 

all this! having met me a few times a year!


my daughter, he calls me in affection, princessa

yet would I know him, a stranger, in a dark room? 


become for him! mold into that strange dream he holds you in!

then might you know him, as he knows you!


as I continue in the way I have only ever been, human girl of grief and wrath

the man I grew beside to call dad, who held my hair in illness and hand in my youth

tells his sons he does not care about me


born to teenage mother, scarred and torn apart by hands of man, 

I have only ever been a girl of sorrow and joy

they dream of my becoming 

loving what they want me to be

rather ever than who I am 


they will assure me, always assure me, dad does not mean it

and father loves you still

have I ever spoken a word as they do? men, in all their selfish glory

their hearts will not turn to you, their eyes will not bend to yours


a dad and a father both, whom I belong to neither


my teenage mother long gone, a woman abandoned in the grave 

her gleaming golden-red hair dry upon the white casket pillows

her cold metal tomb encased in layers of concrete


dad says he does not care about me

father says the distance is my own making 


where then, does daughter go? 


when home is now a graveyard

where her mother's heart rots in the cold