Don’t Call Me Beautiful
Don’t call me beautiful when your hands have become wrenches
prying open my legs.
Your eyebrow raising into your hairline as you
unsuccessfully try to ease the words out of your mouth,
like two roads
separating between
“are you sure” and
“it’ll be okay”.
permission infusing with persuasion.
Don’t call me beautiful when you’ve attached the word fucking
into every compliment that slips out of your mouth.
You didn’t picture my body to be a demolished landscape,
Cracked crevices
Scarred skin.
Call me beautiful when you have seen
The hills of my stomach
Me laughing at the smallest things
Don’t call me beautiful until it is equivalent to the love
As ancient as the ring on my grandmother’s finger.
Call me beautiful when you feel the waves of my love
Crashing onto your shore.
Call me beautiful when I am gone
and you are left remembering the way I smelt
like blossoming flowers,
the same ones you’ve laid on my grave.
(h.t.)