Magnolia Jitter
I spent the summer
eating in furious mouthfuls
and running for
hours in place.
For three months I jumped over my shadow
and listened to the echo of
the same song till the words sounded
foreign and damaging.
I spent all summer on my red-stained
porch that glowed like heaven in the sun. I
spent all summer with my neighbor’s
dog buried in my lap. I thought
I ought to buy him a brush
and set him a warm bath. I
spent all of summer in the sticky Georgia air.
All summer I slept, curled into myself,
believing in the power of magnolias. Believing
they could heal the jittering in my bones
so, I planted my chair in their shadows
and pressed my nose into their shape,
asking: is there an answer?
Bethlehem Zerihun is a really cool person who does really cool things like study English (CTWR) at USC and write poems about magnolias. She is currently in her third year and serves as the Vice President of Professional Programming of Literary Society. For whatever reason, she still doesn’t have a writing blog so you can find her and more of her writing on her regular Instagram.