Analysis

In this story the cockroach is the man,
the curtain my girlhood, the creamed
corn spilled by the mother wasted
familial love, the father's zealotry
a metaphor for emotional blindness.

In this story the radioactive dinosaur
is the man, the city of Tokyo my body,
and the metro tunnel, well, you know.
Fire is fire. Explosions are explosions.
The snow-capped summit of Mount Fuji
signifies faith's chilly endurance.

A facet of the man is represented by
each of the three Magi in this story.
Do not accept his gifts. It's an honest
mistake to assume I'm the Baby
Jesus, but let's face it, I'm the slut,
Mary, whom no one believes
is a virgin, especially not the man.

Gothic romance man owns a mansion
with a special tap for instant boiling
water and acres of heated tile floor.
I'm the maid who scrubs the floor
and sometimes has her hand held
under the tap. The crazy woman
in the attic is me. The horse that won't
be broken is me. The intergenerational
family curse is me. The pig the man
whips for being pig-like is me.

In this story the man is the man
and I am me. His penis is his penis
and my mouth, my mouth. The bed
is my childhood bed, the guest room
bed, the bed in my college dorm
and the futon in my first apartment.
The parents watching TV are my parents,
and the thin scar on my thumb,
the thumb I am showing you now,
is where he sliced me with a razor
to prove he could open me at will.
 

Copyright Credit: Nancy Lee, "Analysis" from What Hurts Going Down.  Copyright © 2020 by Nancy Lee.  Reprinted by permission of McClelland & Stewart, Ltd., a division of Penguin Random House Canada Limited. All rights reserved.
Source: What Hurts Going Down (McClelland & Stewart, Ltd., 2020)