Damaged Photos
Published in Poem Of The Day
You get into puddles with the sky
and when this fails
pit your girl against an ocean.
Choices blur and make off with rooms
in the whiteness. Winged enough to manage
your red kimono's 37 cranes in various
trajectories while you make the coffee.
You as God with rattlesnakes
and His Admiral Death holding down the muscle,
headless and breath swollen.
You scattered in her facelessness
behind the screen door, not frowning, not joyous,
just working her hands in a dish towel,
folding them away.
You as ether, over-exposed bursting place,
dulling with these selves, spun by light and
dropped into shadow places,
forgotten as you put the photos down.
About this poem
"In writing this poem, I began to understand that I was attempting to capture damaged moments, all of which have created splinters, or new selves. Each image has defined me in essential ways. Here were some moments I could gather and put down again, if necessary. Also, years ago, my father found a bag of undeveloped rolls of film from my childhood. The resulting photos were mostly washed out, but I found in the blankness an opportunity for the images of memory."
-Amber Flora Thomas
About Amber Flora Thomas
Amber Flora Thomas is the author of "The Rabbits Could Sing: Poem" (University of Alaska Press, 2012). She teaches at East Carolina University and lives in Washington, N.C.
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The Academy of American Poets is a nonprofit, mission-driven organization, whose aim is to make poetry available to a wider audience. Email The Academy at poem-a-day[at]poets.org.
(c) 2015 Amber Flora Thomas. Originally published by the Academy of American Poets, www.poets.org. Distributed by King Features Syndicate
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