i.
in absence, lieu
of razorblades,
the fingernails, which peel away
from the curve
of forearm
led by fingers so stiff they clench
into claws
reveal angry, torn crescents
which, though white at first,
begin to weep
drip
onto the paper kept
to
make sure this isn’t
a dream.
this is my reality.
a day or two would see claret
turn
to brown stains.
they
smelled salty, slightly,
and reeked
of iron.
the aroma would last,
stick
around,
become synonymous
with the
living death
that consumed my life
for eight years
even when, cleansing my closet
of my past,
i find paper,
blood-soaked, puckered
and bearing the faint scent of
tears.
ii.
as my arms still bled,
running red, the
janitor, walking in
the door spots my tangled limbs
sprawling on the cold
brown tile floor
of the last stall,
knocks, twice, a
hesitant rap on the
hollow steel graffiti-scrawled door
takes one step, two, tries
the handle
i coerce my wooden
limbs, shift,
grab
for toilet paper, stuff in sleeve,
pull shirt over
my hand
sniff loudly, mimic the tears
i can’t cry
“you okay?” she asks, and
i say yeah,
fine
feel better now.
*B.A. senior thesis poem
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