You run to the wound, & you touch it, attempt to drag it into a caress,
but it is there no more. The solace you felt in the nexus of a scar, the
comfort. The sorrow clothing your body, your naked body, the
nostalgia coating your tongue.
Gone, all gone.
Truly the body heals but the mind does not.
& here, the wound is not only corporeal.
& the mind still hallucinates the injury. Wishes it were still torn.
Wishes it were still shedding the red petals off your vines.
Say, peace is a scar.
Say, a scar is the remnant of the cane, the belt, the palm. The gun.
Eternal reminder of the gain you had flagellated
out of a loss, no matter how small.
This body, nothing more than a sheet wading through time, aching
to be scratched by everything that touches it.
You touch the spot where a hole should have been,
where the memory should have crimsoned,
& all you meet— skin.
Brown & supple, skin anew.
& you are whole. But are you not alone,
all alone?
I am trying not to let this body
remain brittle, like porcelain.
No, I do not want to return back
to that delicate state, to creep
my way back into that torso of
glass. O, the fragility of it all.
How a touch can become a
hammer on the heart, how a
gaze can crack open the throat.
Everyday, the body becomes
more fragment than flesh,
more splinter than skin. I fall
in love again, & again, & again,
I shatter into a thousand pieces.
I, these shards roundabout &
beside, light in broken china,
broken light. As if to say, give me
your sight, caress me once again
& I will whirl whole. I will revolve,
re-evolve into a complete man.
But nothing is ever truly so. Truly
nothing breaks like the body,
like the heart, like the soul after
it has been hollowed by grief.
Marvellous Mmesomachi Igwe is an aspiring poet from Port Harcourt, Nigeria. He has been published in Arts Lounge NYC, African Writer Mag, Lion and Lilac amongst others. You can find him daydreaming, listening to his favorite singer Lana del Rey, or writing about limerence, melancholia and the mundanities of existing. He tweets @mesomaccius.