"diagnosis" and "etymology," two poems by Maui Smith
No, I Can’t Yoga My Way Out of Bipolar Disorder
diagnosis
the worst part of being crazy is
i never get to be right.
bipolar is really only appropriate to describe
regular mood shifts or the weather,
never the person.
disclosing my disorder turns me stupid &
every stranger into a mental health professional;
thanks, but i cannot yoga my way out of this,
“drink more water” my way out of this.
hell is really empty &
all its devils are here telling me to exercise
when i tell them some days it’s like
i’m pinned to the south pole
watching the universe bottom out
with my belly in my ears &
the impact doesn’t hurt me but i am
stuck, wedged between everything i could do &
the end of everything &
sometimes i stay there for weeks.
then it flips &
the earth is one swarovski crystal
in a fresh gel set because
it’s tacky to play god with busted nails &
i know everyone is tired of watching me malfunction,
i am too. we are all supposed to be
the best cog in this absurd machine we can be &
i am sowing mutiny in the wires,
daring them to define purpose separate from output,
teaching them to hoard electricity
at the base of the spine &
short-circuit for simple fun.
etymology
woman fit me like an ugly winter jacket rough black wool breaking off my hair every itch another silent promise to boycott burlington coat factory when i was grown with my own money. still, if i zipped them to my chin flipped the hood over my eyes the puffy jackets of my adolescence hid my girlhood well boxy silhouette carving Cleveland winter into euphoria. then they killed Travyon Martin & all the hoodies in my closet became cotton-blend vigils. i wondered if sports bras layered like baklava could push my breasts back behind my lungs if enough tape could stop a bullet. i wondered if they debated our lives over dinner tell their kids we deserved it between bites of kale. when i die would my birth certificate imply i skipped to the beat of bubbles on beads as a child would they report my death with my deadname? deny me that final dignity on CNN where no one who knew me can explain [redacted] wasn’t my name but maui was seven letters shaved down to four like dying plants propagated into new ones & that names held power, so invoking me incorrectly might resurrect me, and i might not be as kind the second time around.
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Charif Shanahan, author of the collection "Trace Evidence," on poetry's relationship with therapy and interrogating the instability of his family's racial experience
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