He Said So | Teen Ink

He Said So

December 27, 2016
By claire.elkin BRONZE, Brooklyn, New York
claire.elkin BRONZE, Brooklyn, New York
3 articles 0 photos 0 comments

A mother's milky skin never keeps you awake for long

My mother is cold, so I am always satisfied by a goosebumps embrace, a quiet good night

My mother has tightly curled hair, it smells like apricots and long nights

My mother never stays awake for too long

 

Her fingers are delicate, smile is true,

She believes me when I say I love you

And she tells me, one day, that

I will have a beautiful daughter.

Just like me.

 

When milky skin holds me some other night,

I imagine I am safe, but It's not the same

His hair is straight, his nails are cut short,

He smells like a sharp smoke on a chilly night

 

When his hands touch my shoulders, I imagine

I am touching my daughter,

And she believes that her mother has the most beautiful hair,

And she envies her perfume.

 

Lately, his skin is rough

He comes home late

And I wouldn't dare ask

If he would maybe want another daughter

 

It hurts when he yells,

But I can feel my daughter here now.

She would tear-stain my shirt

And glide her thumb over me.

 

She's long gone,

Because I am foolish.

Because I am wrong.

Because that's what he says.

 

My daughter was ugly, he said.

I mean I said.

My daughter was expensive, he said.

I mean I said.

My daughter was bad for me, I said. He said. I said. He said.

 

If mama was here now, she would say it wasn't your fault

My mother would curl my hair around her finger and say, it's not your fault

But it has to be

He said so


The author's comments:

This poem isn't really about me, except for the first stanza (which does somewhat resemble my mother). The man I wrote about is imaginary, but the story often resembles real life situations. The main character is a woman who had a great relationship with her mother and thought that she would have the same with a daughter one day. Unfortunately, she suffers psychological abuse at the hands of her partner. This is seen at the end of the poem, such as, "I said. He said. I said. He said." Although this poem isn't based on myself, it is definitely relatable to many women.


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