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To the man on the bus I overheard tell a woman in conversation - presumably a friend:
"you are too ugly to be ***..." ...Dear man on the bus,
Tell the one in five women of this country, that they are beautiful,
their four counterparts, spared torment ugly. Tell the one in three women of this world,
That you will not make piñatas of their bodies. Watch morsels of them, spill greedily
to the famished smiles of your ignorance Shaped like bloodthirsty children. How your
words Hit repeatedly, until they broke open
Like shattered papier-mache cradle How their blood flowed like candy until Hollowed
insides Jaws mangled into misfortune from when they
tried to scream For their Legs torn into a crucifix
Loud cry of eyes muted Tell them how beautiful their silence is.
...Dear man on the bus From smothering cat-calls,
to quickened pace of trek home *** with a dress on.
*** without a dress on. *** as children, who couldn't even dress
themselves. Tell them how ugly their consent was.
Tell the depression, the post traumatic stress The unreported. Tell Mahmudiyah,
A footnote in the history of crimson Iraqi sands
How beautiful the military's silence is Cloaked in how we don't ask, and they
didnt tell, in the name of country. Tell Elizabeth Fritzl
How pretty the flame of her skin was, that turned her Father a torturous moth of
*** 'til she gave birth to 7 choices she never
had ...Dear man on the bus
Tell my 11th grade student, Lauren That she wanted it, her beauty had them coming.
Tell my 7th grade student, Mickayla That she wanted it, her beauty had him coming.
Tell my 3rd grade student, Andre That he wanted it, his beauty had him coming.
Tell the 8 year old me, The God in me I loved fiercely was so gorgeous,
that cousin twice my age, wanted to *** the Holy out of me,
Peeled raw until I was as ugly as she was.
*** is a coward hiding its face in the make-up of silence.
A murderous fruit, that grows best in the shadows of taboo.
A Vietnam *** with red white and blue skin,
A murmur of bodies left vacant by the souls that spend years, pills, poems,
and death trying to learn to reclaim them.
...Dear nameless assailant How this bus carries the burden of your stick
and blindfold Patriarchy that has only taught you to treat women like
ceiling strung jugs Violence claws up from your throat,
Like a monstrous accomplice to the 97 percent that will never see jail
...Dear man on the bus As these words fall out of your mouth,
I pray no one finds your children beautiful enough
to break open, and make a silent, decorative spectacle out of them.