“In the spirit of intl women’s day” by rupi kaur

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“In the spirit of intl women’s day” by rupi kaur. (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0)

“i want to apologize to all the women
i have called pretty.
before i’ve called them intelligent or brave.
i am sorry i made it sound as though
something as simple as what you’re born with
is the most you have to be proud of
when your spirit has crushed mountains
from now on i will say things like, you are resilient
or, you are extraordinary.
not because i don’t think you’re pretty.
but because you are so much more than that”

In the spirit of intl women’s day” by rupi kaur, milk and honey. (@rupikaur_)

International Women’s Day is March 8.

“ism” by Nayyirah Waheed

‘i love myself.’
the
quietest.
simplest.
most
powerful.
revolution.
ever.

Nayyirah Waheed (@nayyirahwaheed)

“The Fifth One Who Walked Away” by Carrie Rudzinski

For the first boy I ever loved
I drove five hours across an ocean of cornfields to crawl into his heat
Every time I left, he cut off one of my fingers and kept it in a clear jar under his bed
I wept the whole drive home
A trail of blood to find my way back
The second boy was just a distraction
The hum of the television and a pair of swollen eyes
He gnawed at my wrists, an ugly puppy
I’d have tasted good, even if I’d never spoken

The third was a fleet of sailboats spilling out across my tongue
A pair of calloused palms, desperation, licking my teeth
I was not so pretty when he opened his eyes

Fourth sewed my mouth shut
So I could only dance inside myself with heavy shoes
So I could pretend I loved him in desperate gestures
So I could unravel in his tired fists

My hands have been fools
They could not have been prepared for you
I talked them into your pockets
Filled their empty bellies with your beautiful lies
My strange american desert
My warm endless night

I did not know to fear the hands that loved you before my own
You stained her all over me
Left the windows open while I slept in your bed
Washed me with a sponge doused in her spit
Every night, I watched you slit off my skin and hang it on her bones
I could not open my mouth for fear she would come spilling out

Now I have been silent for so long
My fingers are tiny blind worms dancing in the night
I tell them stories of our life before the darkness
But I do not know if they believe me
I do not know if they recognise my own voice

Carrie Rudzinski (@shutterdove)

“Darling, Would You Please Pick Up Those Books?” by Kathryn Maris

How many times do I have to say
get rid of the books off the goddamn floor
do you have any idea how it feels
to step over books you wrote about her
bloody hell you sadist what kind of man
are you all day long those fecking books

in my way for 3 years your acclaimed books
tell me now what do you have to say
for yourself you think you’re such a man
silent brooding pondering at the floor
pretending you’re bored when I mention her
fine change the subject ask “Do I feel

like I need more medication” NO I don’t feel
like I need more medication
it’s the books
don’t you see don’t you see it’s her
why don’t you listen to anything I say
and for god’s sake books on the floor
are a safety hazard remember that man

from Cork who nearly died fine that man
fell over a hurley not a book but I don’t feel
you’re getting the point the point is that a floor
is not an intelligent place for books
books I have to see and books that say
exactly where and how you shagged her

what shirt she wore before you shagged her
I can write a book too about some man
better still about you I can say
something to demonize you how would you feel
about that ha ha why don’t I write a book
about how I hoover your sodding floor

and how you’ve never once hoovered your floor
why can’t I be a muse why can’t I be a “her”
what does one have to do to be in a book
around here do I have to be dead for a man
to write me a poem how do you think it feels
to be non muse material can’t you say

you feel for me what you felt for her
can’t you say I’m better than that woman
can’t you get those books off the floor?

Kathryn Maris, via TheGuardian.com

“Ten Things I Need to Know” by Richard Jackson

The brightest stars are the first to explode. Also hearts. It is important to pay attention to love’s high voltage signs. The mockingbird is really ashamed of its own feeble song lost beneath all those he has to imitate. It’s true, the Carolina Wren caught in the bedroom yesterday died because he stepped on a glue trap and tore his wings off. Maybe we have both fallen through the soul’s thin ice already. Even Ethiopia is splitting off from Africa to become its own continent. Last year it moved 10 feet. This will take a million years. There’s always this nostalgia for the days when Time was so unreal it touched us only like the pale shadow of a hawk. Parmenedes transported himself above the beaten path of the stars to find the real that was beyond time. The words you left are still smoldering like the cigarette left in my ashtray as if it were a dying star. The thin thread of its smoke is caught on the ceiling. When love is threatened, the heart crackles with anger like kindling. It’s lucky we are not like hippos who fling dung at each other with their ridiculously tiny tails. Okay, that’s more than ten things I know. Let’s try twenty five, no, let’s not push it, twenty. How many times have we hurt each other not knowing? Destiny wears her clothes inside out. Each desire is a memory of the future. The past is a fake cloud we’ve pasted to a paper sky. That is why our dreams are the most real thing we possess. My logic here is made of your smells, your thighs, your kiss, your words. I collect stars but have no place to put them. You take my breath away only to give back a purer one. The way you dance creates a new constellation. Off the Thai coast they have discovered a new undersea world with sharks that walk on their fins. In Indonesia, a kangaroo that lives in a tree. Why is the shadow I cast always yours? Okay, let’s say I list 33 things, a solid symbolic number. It’s good to have a plan so we don’t lose ourselves, but then who has taken the ladder out of the hole I’ve dug for myself? How can I revive the things I’ve killed inside you? The real is a sunset over a shanty by the river. The keys that lock the door also open it. When we shut out each other, nothing seems real except the empty caves of our hearts, yet how arrogant to think our problems finally matter when thousands of children are bayoneted in the Congo this year. How incredible to think of those soldiers never having loved. Nothing ever ends. Will this? Byron never knew where his epic, Don Juan, would end and died in the middle of it. The good thing about being dead is that you don’t have to go through all that dying again. You just toast it. See, the real is what the imagination decants. You can be anywhere with the turn of a few words. Some say the feeling of out-of-the-body travel is due to certain short circuits in parts of the brain. That doesn’t matter because I’m still drifting towards you. Inside you are cumulous clouds I could float on all night. The difference is always between what we say we love and what we love. Tonight, for instance, I could drink from the bowl of your belly. It doesn’t matter if our feelings shift like sands beneath the river, there’s still the river. Maybe the real is the way your palms fit against my face, or the way you hold my life inside you until it is nothing at all, the way this plant droops, this flower called Heart’s Bursting Flower, with its beads of red hanging from their delicate threads any breeze might break, any word might shatter, any hurt might crush.

Richard Jackson, via superstition [review]