Painting Flowers at a Time Like This
After Hanif Abdurraqib
Dear editor,
This is not a political poem but
in the wake of assassinations of
presidents and soil sliding down
like a scream swallowing its own
sound, I pour water into a glass
jar and think of my cousin,
(whose name means ‘what an angel’)
cleaning meat in the yard,
both legs, amputated because
sugar eats bodies like hard
candy, slow and sure. I think of the fire
in my own legs, my feet, an ashtray,
think the many ways I can die
in this body, in this skin, and
squeeze blush-colored paint to keep
from dying, today, to keep from crying
over four bullets in my cousin’s head,
a different cousin (whose name means
noble) and just like that, without
invitation, the voice in my mind says
make this something else, make it—
make it protest, say it loud—make it
make it say something else but
instead, I smooth the bristles’ edge
to remove excess paint, dip and touch
pen-sized brush to canvas like jazz
snare drum, conjure wild rose
petals, a wall around my body,
armor for hallowed ground.
I say all that to say,
I deserve this.
To paint flowers.
I deserve to paint flowers.
I deserve it, I said.