Loading...

DIRT by Nadia Farjami

Dirt

my great-uncle

drenches the

headlines in honey;

he watches syllables slur together

and become

illegible under a sunny ooze

 

my great-uncle

doesn’t know

that

i wake up early to

read the paper before him,

that

i let scalding sentences slide down

my spine,

that

i coax crinkled commas into

my ears

 

my great-uncle

holds a

skinned

rabbit

in one hand

and a

riffle

in the other

 

when i beg him to

dispose of the danger in his palms,

he says

i’m just a child

 

he says that

forbidden words stumble out

of my mouth,

words about a world

without weapons

 

he says

he’ll

destroy the dirt dancing on

my tongue

 

he feeds

me detergent for

dinner

 

he doesn’t know

that

dreams can’t be

disinfected

 

Nadia Mehri Farjam, 21, lives in California. She daylights as a student-writer at UC Berkeley. Nadia loves writing about good people.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *