Cornrows
By Kesi A., Springfield Gardens, NY
(from the manuscript “In My Grasp”)
He’d asked why I wore cornrows to school.
So I began to wish that the Crème of Nature bottle would transform my Afro into a flawless, vibrant canopy. Long hair would make me pretty, I was sure of it the chemicals weren’t good enough.
And when a short, skinny, light-skinned local train would
flutter by his eyes would follow her into ether, and I thought that mine weren’t light enough.
He turned me off going to school with a drawstring bag that cradled only an unsharpened pencil. He forgot things that took so much courage for me to tell, and he had the ability to make me question myself when he barely had the ability to read.
But he turned me on when I hugged him, I touched cloud 546,999 feeling like I’d digested butterflies and I was glad that there was something in me somebody else liked.
My affection has withered away and died like the smoke rings between his parched lips.
On tomorrow’s tomorrow I will wake up for school tired and groggy with stress. There will be rows and rows of braids in my hair, and I will deflate under the weight of my book bag ripping at the stitches because of my books. I’ll embrace the sun as my skin gets darker I won’t hold onto my Colorblends as tightly and I will let my hopes of being stereotypically attractive fade.
Because I’m finally over him.
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