I was naive, unaware
I did not understand
When the car sat in the garage while I walked to school in forty-five degrees
I was never allowed to drive
I had been invisible for a while
When fever kept me in bed
Mama whispered verses,
healing blew across my face
I felt love
Or was it faith? Stronger.
I didn’t yet know what that meant
My dada, he wasn't there when I was born
My name was given over the phone
Mother washed for six then
and ants ate at my scalp
I picked the wound until it grew
Was I six or eight when he was finally back?
then surprise came with joy, he had joy!
I saw him laugh with the cousins’ daughters
That side of him I had never seen before
I was shy, but why was it kept away?
I scratched my head, did not understand
I jumped across rooftops,
toes bleeding red into the dust
I played with scissors
in ignorant bliss
I played in solitude, in fear
Mother was always praying
or at the sink
or fetching water for my abbuji
so he would not rage
But he did.
So angry, angry, angry
All because of a missing waif-beater vest
And still, no work, no help
Just the mosque
I was too young to understand
Now I live with a kind man
Responsible. Present.
and father says he would rather die
than see me like this
But I live.
And I live.
And I live.
Albeit estranged... so impossible
to comprehend
I am worldly, aware
I now understand
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