White oaks thrash, moonlight drifts

the ceiling, as if I'm under water.

Propane coils, warms my bones.

Gone are the magics and songs,

all the things our grandmothers buried—

piles of feathers and angel bones,

inscribed by all who came before.

When I was twelve, my cousins

called me ugly, enough to make it last.

Tonight a celebrity on Oprah

imagines a future where features

can be removed and replaced

on a whim. A moth presses wings

thin as paper against my window,

more beautiful than I could ever be.

Ryegrass raise seedy heads

beyond the bull thistle and preen.

Everything alive aches for more.

Copyright © Kari Gunter-Seymour. This poem originally appeared in A Place So Deep Inside America It Can’t Be Seen (Sheila-Na-Gig Editions, 2020). Used with permission of the author.