Haunted Silences
My reaction to finally giving voice to that which has
terrified, shocked, and broken me
has been mixed
To my younger self, I owe an apology
I am sorry for being so weak
for thinking that the only way to be
was to feel nothing
Now, I am always feeling,
always affected, always in pain
Moments of joy become bursts of overwhelming
anxiety
simple conversations, casual dates,
hurt me, they force lingering pain to the surface
I stopped writing poetry for 7 years because I was
ashamed,
afraid to show my emotions, to burden others with the
untenability of my existence
Poetry has not taught me how to grieve, how to be in this world
but language coats the searing pain of silence,
reveals the secret so violently hidden
gives me the power to declare-
I am Asian-American
I am gay
I am low income
and I am worth something
Through poetry, I realize
That I am not interested in white gay culture
That capitalism is truly evil
That my being a product of imperial violence and mixing is not “adorable”
That I am not interested in being an “American,” to passing on that legacy of abusive greed
That my pain is not mine alone,
my experience is haunted by centuries of violence
and thus, I alone cannot heal
it is not just the silences of my lifetime, but an entire history
sidelined, erased, misconstrued
which has broken me, broken my family, broken this world
The particularity of the poem, of the poet, of the individual
has taught me
the limits of my own capacity, the legacies my existence inherited, whether voluntarily or not
I want to heal, to find wholeness,
but my wholeness is bound up in the lives of my family members,
my friends, the lives taken by imperialist violence, and especially
those lives that cannot be lived because I exist, because I too am
complicit
I cannot be whole if my existence means the suffering of someone else
Somehow,
in the excess and indulgence of language,
I have learned the value of community,
of collectivity
of living a life that is not concerned solely with my freedom
but the liberation, fulfillment, and wholeness
of humanity