You call the thing inside of you a monster
as you gyrate thigh-level with your open mouth.
The stranger spunks into your face.
You think of Spiderman and inside
you can’t help but feel like the villain.
You call the thing inside of you a monster
but you don’t even know what those look like
anymore, lost to childhood dark. Your face
drenched in white crude, your eyes two mirrors
showing nothing. Then he hitches up his pants
and nods to leave. Then you’re alone again.
You do this to yourself to call something else
a monster. The monster is always the stranger.
The monster is always what you call the thing inside you.
Not you, but the thing inside you. See the difference?
You’re still afraid to find there’s nothing there.
Your face the painted shield, war-white, against
an inner darkness.
My father calls it the God-shaped hole.
My friends who don’t believe call it nothing,
change the subject. It’s the same sometimes—
naming, not naming.
Your face splits open,
like a cocoon, revealing an opening, a voice.
Its thereness speaks from the hole’s bottom,
and for a long while, you’re afraid of the voice.
Then you’re afraid of the silence.
(Originally appeared in Duende)
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