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washcloths (In Case It's Holding Things Together)
I was younger,
and clean surfaces would calm my mind;
always on edge,
always the deer in headlights;
some things just don’t change.
But when the surface couldn’t be cleaned -
I’d cover it up;
concealer over puffy eyes;
if you conceal it, you won’t feel it anymore.
My mother never let me use makeup remover,
it was always washcloths and a ton of water,
and sometimes coconut oil;
she was always there to take away the disposable wipes,
and throw the cloths in the laundry,
forever smudged with inky black;
some things change too quickly.
Then we disagreed, because we could,
I was older, and braver, and dumber,
and I argued with her every chance I got.
I know now that after the makeup’s wiped off,
the tear stains are still there, like ghosts,
they haunt my face, forever etched
because I cried too much as a child.
I always wanted to rip off the Band-Aid,
she always said to leave it on;
I guess she didn’t know how to explain it to a four year old
because I didn’t listen anyway.
I’d wonder, why leave it on
if the cut doesn’t bleed anymore?
What do you protect me from?
She shook her head at me,
took a washcloth, wiped away the dried blood,
and replaced the Band-Aid with a fresh one.
“In case it’s holding things together, silly girl,” she must’ve thought.
When I was ten, and felt rebellious enough,
I ripped it off with vigor and delight.
The cut opened again,
probably because I prodded at it too much,
“Whatever,” I thought.
I got stitches in my foot three years later,
“Whatever” I thought.
Now I curse myself and say every day,
don’t rip it off, leave it on for a while longer,
in case it’s holding things together.
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