Unzipping My Skin
Poetry is a physical,
invisible source of light
that peeks from
holes inside of us;
it is a voice for the
physicality of eyes and fingers
and a product of the process
of healing from little scars
and gaping eyes and ears
of small children.
A “journey of a nervous impulse,”
it is an untreated spasm
sifted in neurotic channels
and recorded in words that flip
Webster’s dictionary,
leaving it to wander
aimlessly.
A poem is the insertion of
ideas but mostly parodies
from someone else’s mind
because all of the memorable lines
have already been written.
Why, then, do I continue
to unzip my skin
and let others peer inside,
all the time wondering
if I revealed
too much…too little…
or just enough to make them wonder?