Monday, November 26, 2007

Breaking Births

When I was born into the body of a baby,
in the four white-washed walls of a hospital,
I was born into a family passioned by abuse,
born into a world thriving on wages of war
weighing on innocent lives.
I was born into the undeveloped good and evil of myself.

When I was born into the body of a toddler,
I was born into a longing to read and be read to.
Born into escaping an adult's alcoholism and a parent's neglect
by tossing rhymes around with Dr. Seuss.
Born into hide-and-seek games that hid me from the boogey man of my father.
Born into having Toby, my puppy, and stuffed animals as substitute best-friends.

When I was born into the body of a child,
I was born into a soccer player, a miniature Mia Hamm.
I was born into blinding,
censoring the faults of those around me and my self:
focusing on everyone's good, learning how to subtract their evils.
Born into projecting my brothers and me into a new family.
Or two
or three.

When I was born into the body of a teenager,
the blinders had long since departed
to save some other innocent child from the shameful letdowns of life.
Born into following the lessons taught to me by five teachers nicknamed brothers.
All while hollowing my own way out of the depths of depression.

Born into tempting myself with crisses and crosses
and other doses of self-medication.
Born into a bothersome girl where trust is non-existant
and mental illness is apparently prevalent.
At 16 years old,
I was born into another hospital minus the white-washed walls,
replaced with numerous restrictions,
for two months of my life.
Pushed out of the pointlessness of reality
and into a mini collage of potentially, suicidal fragments of strayed people.

When I was reborn into the body of a young adult,
I was born into the realms of perspective
and realizing life could be worse.
Never having the patterned life people tend to puzzle themselves into
no longer is an excuse for unhappiness.
Born away from letting milligrams of their prescribed medication
etch a livable existance.
Born into a life of creative reflection and progression:
living on and in music,
placing laughter in someone's smile,
the shine in anyone's eyes,

ignoring imperfections and improving anything from everything.

When I am born into the body of an adult,
hopefully a concrete identity will emerge.
Maybe one day,
when I am done playing dress-up with images,

I will find one to define
and help future generations
be born again without restraints.
But mostly without unhappiness.

When I am born into the body of an elder,
I hope I am born into the person I can be proud of
and then, one day, be born into an afterlife where lessons carry over.

Everyone accepts one another the next time I am born.

4 comments:

Ms. Strout said...

Hey, lady -

You did a nice job with those few changes. I think this poem is still looking for revision, though - maybe some "paring down" in certain places. The last line of your first stanza is just so good: "I was born into the undeveloped good and evil of myself." The same goes for "escaping an adult's alcoholism... by tossing rhymes with Dr. Seuss." I think you should use this kind of language as a barometer of sorts for the rest of the poem. Is the rest of your diction throughout as effective? I'm not saying it isn't; I am just saying to go through the piece with that question in mind.

In other news, I think it would be a great submission for the contest. In terms of it being "too personal," I don't think that should be too much of a concern. I am not sure what the judges are looking for, but if it is a high-quality piece of writing, it should not necessarily matter what the subject matter happens to be. (That is my opinion, anyway.) Okay, I think that's all for now. Sit with your words awhile and see what happens. We can chat about it more in class, also. :)

Zeus. said...

I like a lot of the language you use in this piece. i do agree with Strout-dog about going through the piece and making some of the diction stronger throughout.

I love the detail you use. Naming is knowing, as our CW teacher always says.

just one suggestion, if i can:

"I was born into blinding myself,
censoring the faults of those around me and my self: "

perhaps take out the first "myself"

I think the line "I was born into blinding" is stronger.

Just an opinion. Take care, and good luck with the contest (Dodge Poetry, right?). I'm still trying to figure out what to send in.

Zeus. said...

Ah and I think you should revisit your title. Such a strong piece should have an extra strong title. Also, the phrase "Born into" is so prominent in your piece I don't think it needs to be the title.

Anonymous said...

good job on ur poem i never knew any of this on how u felt. i love you please always know that if you need to talk etc im here. love you always your big sis karen