Oleander

From where you’re standing,
let’s both pretend that
all you see is all there is:
my body is healthy,
well groomed, well fed,
never mind that there are
large, purple bruises on my soul.

Because nagging is a form of
psychological abuse
and everyday I have my own brand
of struggling to survive.

I still remember the bad dreams
I had when she’d touch me.
I remember standing in front of
the school cafeteria, staring at
the door for half an hour,
having an internal shouting argument
with myself on whether I deserved lunch,
because she’d told me that morning
I was lazy and selfish and irresponsible
and girls like that didn’t deserve to eat.
I remember never being good enough.
I remember being laughed at
when I was seven and I asked her
if I was beautiful.
I remember getting my first
publishing deal and she told me
don’t be too happy, because
so many things can still go wrong.
I remember the nights I would
muffle my violent coughs with a pillow
so she could sleep in peace and not
find out I had pneumonia because
she said I was disrespecting her
every time I allowed myself to get sick.
I remember how she’d turn off the lights
and lecture me in the dark
every time I messed up
as if it disgusted her to see me cry
so I promised myself at one point
she had no right to see my tears
and I remember searching for a place
where I could be myself
and I remember learning how
to fix a schedule for my emotions.

I remember, more recently, showing her
the man I’ve decided to marry
and she asked me, am I that ugly
that I couldn’t find any other man
to love me.

Don’t look too close.
My body is OK, but my spirit
is having an awful day.



6 responses to “Oleander”

  1. Oh beautiful POET, you had me in tears with these words, I can so relate. Click those heels and to get to the home in your heart, your new love. My heart goes out to you and my prayers go up for you.

  2. Thank you for your scrupulous honesty, princess. You are the phoenix rising from the flame.

  3. Patrick Pedat Ebediyah Golston Avatar
    Patrick Pedat Ebediyah Golston

    My sweet dear Little Iris. You are amazing…

  4. Iris, this is heart-wrenching. It has that deep, dark, soulful voice I love in Anne Sexton and Sylvia Plath, but a purity and sense of hope that I can’t find in any other poet whose work I keep in my mind. It’s beautiful. I think I’d call it lyrical confessional; whatever category this piece falls into, though, it is absolutely true and absolutely consuming.

  5. Wonderful, not a word out of place, every letter vital. And you’ve struck a nerve in me, why do so many Filipina mothers take love and make of it a hunting knife?

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