Self-Portrait Through My Cracked Bedroom Door
Editorial Content Warning: This poem contains violent imagery and references to abuse.
There’s a hole in my bedroom door
from the time you slammed your fist through the panels
Splintered wood and
blood rivers streaming past your bony knuckles
Is that truly the same ichor coursing through my veins?
You said you’d fix the door
but this house has enough holes
To bear more resemblance to Swiss cheese
than a home
The bedroom walls sweat from your incendiary temper
my overgrown five-foot frame is glued to the twin size mattress
And melts through the floorboards
You inflict violence with a curl of your forked tongue,
ignite danger with a bottle on your lips
And raise hell with divine or demonic ambiguity—
it’s uncertain if I fear you
Or envy you
I stagger over broken promises,
vacant apologies
And indigo bruises
poisoning the lawn behind the white picket fence
Digging through rotten plants and depleted soil
On cross-hatched knees
Futility decorates my fractured fingernails
as I claw for a tunnel leading me out of
This burning house
but it seems as though
I’m already
on fire
I am haunted by my DNA
like father, like daughter
How do I suppress the paternal genome from taking root?
more of your features usurp mine,
Marring my ghastly complexion
Now the bathroom sparkles with shattered mirror glass
and warm ichor sticks to my lacerated palm
I suppose it’s impossible to be me without weeds of you
I tiptoe around all the fractures littering the linoleum floor,
hallway hardwood
And bedroom carpet
as smoke billows out the window
Daddy, please tell me
how does one forgive and forget
when my bedroom door remains broken?