Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Don't You Want to Share the Guilt?

When you are involved and he belongs to someone else,
your self becomes less of a self.

You only get fragments.

At first they're the good parts:
excitement and giddiness,
until confusion seeps in, and confessions pour out
and then you get the sad parts and the mad parts.

All the while you're constructing yourself as an image,
spending hours creating an idea
made of lipstick and moisturizer and deep-conditioned ends,

so when he shows up -- late,
if he shows up --
you can smile and sympathetically nod,
offer yourself as affirmation,
until he exhausts himself of complaints
and you reach out to touch his arm
and provide a different way for him to exhaust himself.
This is what validates you.


And he pants
and he begs
and he whines,
and he's so much like an animal
he makes all men animals.

It is guilt
and control.

You torture yourself with pictures of his "real life",
consoling yourself with whatever flaws you can find to tear it apart --
she has man lips --
as if that's some sort of a sin she should be punished for.
As if you're entitled to do the punishing.


You are appearance.
He is not interested in insightful or profound,
so you dilute yourself,
hollow yourself out,
tightly contain everything you,
because he might get annoyed.

You don't get a whole person.
You are not a whole person,
You don't deserve a whole person.

He leaves over and over and over --
because you tried to be a real person,
you demanded attention that you didn't deserve,
you used the word 'feelings' --
but he always comes back,
pleading, insisting that he needs you.
This makes you feel secure.

You know it's only you because you're there,
but you like his reason better.

He gets to disappear
and leave you to contend with
all the ugly little pieces.

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