A Tangle of Gorgons
The lesbians that lived in the apartment to the left
of my grandmother’s were always described in whispers.
Caught in her teeth, her jokes: a pile of serpents
thrown at her neighbors for stealing her appetite
—always hurried, always hushed, hissing her sissies
& scissoring as if the slurs would set them straight.
It’s a complex: to return callous to the same snake
den reminding you of your own head’s sibilance.
I am of that ilk, I suppose: dreadful
by happenstance, mere blinking having stopped
many a man in his tracks before me. Forbidden
to enjoy it, this calcified lineage.
Like mighty Stheno & Sister Euryale, our family
name insists wartime: those of us battling this curse
of loving men never cease to stop making rocks
of them, I, hating their waters, never able to skip any.
They don’t make it that far. Somehow, always sinking,
always cracking, always losing parts of themselves.
Before my father’s cleaving to fracture, I eroded
his visage to ruin. I barely recognize
him anymore, call him by his first name;
in my head, shortening the suffix. The second time
I cried for a man, my heart became a stone
I’m not sure I can pass off for a body part.
I don’t often mention it, but I need
to speak on our history of numbness
—the golems we bear to know what it is
to bury a heart because someone abused it;
how I’ve seen it: every sorrow a reflection
I’ve avoided combing through, favoring the gleam
of being shorn bald. I must be specific:
I have mirrored these monsters before, severed
a personhood & expected it inconsequential.
But snakes won’t stop coming out of my face now.
Their headless balm of displaced oil, preferring
the word serpentine to wolfish, litters
the sink with onyx scales graying as old money,
losing count of hours lost losing count
of bottles of Nair, losing count of quarters
lost promising men that they won’t bite.
Unless unsettled, my mother bites, insisting my series
of settling unsettles her. I am getting upset again,
steaming at how I am always seen
as the unintended coven member, learned
in the ways the women folded their prayers
as they did their napkins—tucked in the center
of a lap in the center of a man in the center of a table
in the center of a lap in the center of a house
in the center of a lapse in the center of a judgment
asking why I’m still sitting inside, my uncles ponder,
the weatherworn heir, moistened of caches of secrets
of stoners & sisters of sinners in secrets in service
of sexes insistent on serving their bullshit
—I’m sure they too would prefer me headless.
It is frightening: I come from a stony people,
my own uncle’s middle name meaning gem.
My grandma was clever like that, slipped regal
wishes into her children as if to imbue
them with crowns instead of petrifying them.
We are skilled in this type of sorcery,
tangling regret with dissatisfaction
when sulking a sorry might not be enough.
But, it slinks off our lips anyway,
disdain’s silhouette appearing only in light
of our gorgonry, this, our mother tongue,
how we stilled our anguish, scarred our statues
of psyches so, our countenances bled millennia
before we ever turned to stone.
Hear them whisper what my secret is:
I have hardened for men many a day,
wantoned my waist round unwanted Perseans
just to see if I could still do it again.
I wound. They whined. They slunk. They swung.
They spat. They struck. They slung that weak shit
like they just knew they were hitting it right
—their ego, its scissor, a sword-swallowing cut
intent on making a trophy of me—I’m stunned.
My God. They never remember the head.
Source: Poetry (January 2021)