get well
card
a girl was
battered
sometimes by
her angry mother with the father’s belt,
but because
mother said to,
most often
her father swung that leather strip
or his hand,
while he
said,
“look at me
when i talk to you.
don’t look
at me like that.”
or he’d ask,
“what are
you crying for? i’ll give you something to cry for,”
“don’t you
feel it? i’ll make you feel it,”
then he’d
hit again.
again.
and the girl
hugged herself and tried not to cry too much or too little
saying in
her mind, “not your fault.
remember
they used to love you.
try to
forgive.
try.
it’s not
your
fault.”
a young
woman was declared tramp and evicted
by her
landlady
when she
respectfully, privately
requested
that the older woman tell the elder's father
to please
keep his strange words,
and his
hands
off.
so the young
woman walked along the treed, nighttime road
with cases
and purse in arms and wept silently
while
strangers stared
thinking to
herself, “not your fault.
they are
sick.
try to
forgive.
try.
it’s not
your
fault.”
an
at-home-alone daughter was raped
by a drunken
neighbour
who
chastised her sin,
so she
reclused to her room
and watched
the door,
for months.
till one
evening she whispered her shame,
and her
mother recradled the girl in arms and wept with her,
saying, “not
your fault.
his mind is
sick.
try to
forgive.
try.
it’s not
your
fault.”
a
‘with-child’ woman was pounded
by a
stranger who threw his jacket over her head
on a
downtown street,
beaten as he
shrieked, “bitch! bitch!”
and later
her sister held the woman in her arms and wept with her
saying, “not
your fault.
his mind is
sick.
try to
forgive.
try.
it’s not
your
fault.”
how many
more
we belted
girls?
we tormented
women?
we raped
daughters?
we pounded
mothers?
before we
all walk together
and need no
longer cry, “not our fault.
it's the
violence-borne society,
the
violence-porne society,
the
violence-torn society,
that is
sick.
it’s not
our
fault.”
no more,
Creator,
please.
no more,
now.
we
walk
together
now.
~
manidoonaateshing-ikwe / phylmarie
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