Mother lies
Esther Kim
Potomac, MD
Holton-Arms School
Poetry
There is nothing to see,
but as she tends
the town, I find
this is what ignorance
tastes like—
satin and discarded gum.
When she says,
we’re moving, I decide
I’ll hang an elegy
in my new bedroom
for every i-don’t-know
she spells out—
because each syllable
is another piece of this town
chipping away. Farewell
to yogurt cups
and calloused faces, sticky
streets we wander down.
Mother smooths the radio dial
as we drive, the cool
of piano trickling in, numbing
the ride. Her words rub
against the stereo,
one voice under another:
there, there. In the rearview,
as the radio wanes
and we unhear the town,
I watch the streetlights
loosen one-by-one
their footholds in the soil.
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This piece was previously featured on School Lunch of Lunch Ticket on 8/19/20.
ELOGIO EDITORIAL
The author does not hold back in this fast paced and lyrical poem, and transports the reader into the world of "Mother lies" from the very first line.
Esther Kim is a student at the Holton-Arms School in Bethesda, Maryland. Her poetry has been recognized by The Atlantic, the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards as a National Gold Medalist, and the Poetry Society of the UK. She will graduate in 2021.
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