i, seated at the right hand, mother still at the grave
for let my death not be in vain
hollow melodies of appraisal, an unfamiliar craze
elegies of exasperated mourning
who i was, who i am, who i’m meant to be.
for let currents stop upon the news
grieve quietly to death, to a thirsty drought
wisteria rung dry to a fable of what it once was
so, mourn so tragically it pleases me so.
rebirth my bare feet grown to carry silk gowns
and crowns placed upon my grave
for let words alas find their worth
so dandelion will spring on a skull-shaped hill
with my name engrained in grandeur.
Myriam Alcala (they/them) is a junior in the Journalism and Creative Writing majors. Alcala is a previously published writer for the Denver Post and Daily Trojan and now is a USC editor at Annenberg Media. Their poetry is inspired by nature and the rollercoaster of emotions surrounding being a young adult pulling from personal experience.
You can follow Myriam on Instagram here.