» Poetry

Sonnet for trigger → obsessional doubt → consequence

Erica Dawson

 

The surgeon left my ovaries intact.

And, once a month, they still release an egg

which slowly rots beside my spine, in back,

my spleen, in front, between my ribs. I beg

you, menopause, come sooner than later.

Filled with half-lives, degrading, in my hollows,

I know mother nature always caters

to men, their bodies stronger, so it follows

I should break down. But what if each egg was a spore

that could give rise to something new without

a man. Maybe just a tiny core

of a human. Some fifty guts to stomach the doubt

of whether or not my body is blameless,

if it’s awful to survive being buried in darkness.

Share

Erica Dawson

Erica Dawson is a Black neurodivergent poet living in the Baltimore-DC area. The author of three books of poetry, most recently When Rap Spoke Straight to God (Tin House, 2018), her poems have appeared in Best American Poetry, Libre, Orion, Revel, Shō Poetry Journal, The Believer, and other journals and anthologies.