NaPoWriMo Day 10

I walk these cobbled closes
And pathways paved with memories
That wear down with every step,

Pacing day after day,
Trying to remember and forget
The stories that haunt these streets.

I curse the ground beneath my feet
I curse the will that keeps me walking
Through constant pain.

I struggle to hear myself talking
And curse the rain and its echoes
That sound like mocking applause.

I think back to everyone I’ve lost
And finally accept
I’m not cut out to be a tour guide.

© Emilie C. Black, 2020

NaPoWriMo Day 9

You had to leave. Not because you wanted to, but because they wanted you to. Because they wanted to be safe and happy and that couldn’t happen if you were vaguely gay. You knew they were wrong but the truth would take too long to explain and the pain would only get worse if you tried.

So you packed up the person they wanted you to be and moved out of their house, carrying the baggage around like a blanket that kept you cold at night while you traveled from door to door, sleeping on sofas and floors, wrapped in clothes that weren’t yours anymore but at least they fit.

Maybe if you wore them long enough, playing a part that could please them would be possible. Maybe the Sharpie ink scars they tattooed on your skin and your soul would sink in and make you acceptable, at least to them if not yourself. Maybe you could live with that. For a while.

Flannel shirts don’t discriminate. They hang and wrap around you, multicoloured like the flags you want to wear like a cape and fly and be free in. Soft sleeves mop up the tears and blood you shed as you try to cut and carve your way to the person you want to be.

Your friends complain you don’t dress up for Halloween but you don’t know how to explain that you’re wearing a costume every damn day. You’ve painted a smile on your face but looking at your eyes in the mirror reminds you how fake it is.

You roll up your sleeves and you look like the person you’ve always pretended to be and hate yourself. You heard people say your name and hate yourself. You get called sir by the waiter and hate yourself. You lie in the hospital bed, think about everything you’ve been and had bto be and hate yourself.

So you wrap yourself in your flannel. You feel the soft press against your skin, watch the coloured lines contour and curve around your arms and want to be like that. Curved and carved into that coke-bottle glass frame. You want your chest to be heavy from love and happiness instead of negativity.

So you shave off the physical and metaphorical beards that kept you safe, secure and in sadness. You grow your hair out and raise your voice in volume and pitch. It’s taken four years, but you’ve finally left those boxes of boy clothes by the side of the road and in thrift stores for the people who need them.

You keep the flannel shirts. Not to remind you of who you were, but to wear them as multicoloured flags, proud and open on your new chest, with all the queer t-shirts you need emblazoned with the logos of who you really are. They wrap around your wrists and arms like warm hugs from an old friend that doesn’t care about the old you, just the new.

© Emilie C. Black, 2020

NaPoWriMo Day 8

(Today’s poem is a surprise sequel to my magnum opus (ha!) “Dear Ms Pacman“)

I never gave you enough credit.
I poured my soul out on Reddit
I always thought it,
But I never said it:

Dear Ms Pacman, I love you.
And I’m sorry.

In the near perfect pie chart of our love
There was always a piece missing;
A missing slice, an open wound;
A hole that you could never fill,
So I became addicted to fruit and pills.
I began to chase ghosts
And run from the past
So I guess, overall, I was kind of an ass.

Dear Ms Pacman, I’m sorry.

I’m sorry for ghosting you,
I treated you like you were a game,
You were supposed to be cherished
But instead I won you then threw you away,
Like something I could come back to i
If I had the time,
But now you’ve left and
There’s no changing your mind.

Dear Ms Pacman, I’m sorry.

I’m sorry for treating love
Like something you can get a high score in.
You deserved so much more than me
But I wouldn’t set you free because
I was determined I could make you happy
And kept you beside me,
Tied in an emotional Gordian knot
Until you cut yourself free.
.
Dear Ms Pacman,
I’m sorry.

@ Emilie C.Black, 2020

NaPoWriMo Day 6

Whatever happened to tea?
It used to just be a basic brew
With milk and two and
That was enough for me.

Because it’s no longer a matter of
Black and white.
Between the red and green,
A million shades I’ve never seen;
Light, gold, and brown,
A veritable spectrum,
An LGB-Tea-

What the fuck happened to tea?
I just want a basic brew
With milk and two but
That’s not good enough for you

I thought ethically sourced was
Par for the course
But now I can’t buy Tetley
Without feeling remorse.
Fair trade is in retrograde,
We’ve all been betrayed
Into supporting a slave trade-

And I wish
I didn’t need a degree in geography
To order a cup of fucking coffee,
Leafing through Encyclopedia Britannica
To find the difference between
Colombian and Arabica,
But worst of all:

I was tricked
And dunked a rich biscuit
In a cup of green hibiscus.
It. Was. Vile.

© Emilie C. Black, Apr 2020

NaPoWriMo Day 5

It was a day.
Nothing big,
Nothing lost,
Nothing major,
Nothing special.
Just another day;
The sun shone,
The earth moved,
Just another day.

It was a day.
Nothing was special.
No superfluous similes.
No grandiose spectacle.
No dextrous metaphors.
Just passive verse in a passive tense

© Emilie C. Black, Apr 2020