Mycah Miller
Fat Girl Galaxy, or A Poem In Which the Fat Girl is an Erasure of the Previous Part
After “Blackout” by Zach Goldberg
1.
I used to watercolor my thighs, in high school,
paint galaxies with bloody edges like if you tore
into me, all you’d find was brightness – stretched
belly stars mark my bones and ligaments. Every
mouth I’ve owned is open wide, convincing myself of
belonging. “Big” must be my favorite word, to use
it so often and to believe it. Every waistband is a joke. Every
belt I own has broken, I mend it again and take pity
when I must cut it down to fix it. I share a bottle of wine with
my grandmother, long past, in a dream. We guess
which resembles us more: the thick glass or the blood that wills us
to chase ourselves down its throat. Once, I received a text
instructing me to join “overeaters anonymous;” still, fat
in public is a statement everyone else chooses
to make of me. A pound lost is a pound congratulated, praise
becomes a fear when it is confirmation of the invalidity of
my empyrean. Fat body is sun only when sunburn, is allowed
celestial standards only if too much.
2.
my thighs paint with bloody edges, if you tore
into me, all you’d find was stretched
belly bones and every mouth open wide.
belonging big must be to believe every joke, every
belt. I mend pity when I must, share a bottle of wine with
my dream which resembles more thick blood will to chase
ourselves down. Once, I received a text to join
“overeaters anonymous;” fat in public is a statement one chooses
to celebrate, praise is confirmation of the validity of
my empyrean. Fat body is sun, is allowed
celestial standards.
3.
my thighs bloody, if you tore into me, you’d find
stretched belly and mouth open wide.
big must be to believe every pity when I must, share
wine thick will to chase down a statement chose
to praise. of empyrean, fat body is sun, is
celestial standards.
4.
if you tore into me, you’d find
mouth open to pity praise. empyrean, fat body is
celestial.