12/1/2023 Poetry By Lynne EllisFlickr CC
It's Morning Again in Post-Roe America Out of town and buzzed awake too early by a phone call. A sharp voice: You are parked in the wrong spot. Your car is in the wrong spot. We have been trying to reach you. You are in the wrong spot. A friend, staying at my apartment, forgot the space assigned. I call him three times, no longer in possession of my bodily autonomy. I leave a message, no longer truly free. You're in the wrong parking spot, without a right to privacy. You have to move. I hang up, law-stripped. I get out of bed, naked, take a leak, the piss still yellow, mine to care for but not really mine. Shower in the soap and water I paid for, scrub armpits, an ass that now belongs to someone else. Rinse water past coiled coarse hairs and over not-my-clit, not-my-labia, vulva not trusted in my hands. I pat dry God's most sacred parts of me, now the jurisdiction of the state. I dress in my Abortion Is Normal t-shirt and pedal my bike to new corners of the city, smile at people and they smile back—teeth no longer their own, lips, kidneys, eyes, testes, lungs no longer their own—as though someone couldn't pull their organs out at any time, to "save a life." Lynne Ellis (she/they) writes in pen. Their words appear in the North American Review, Poetry Northwest, Sonora Review, and many other beloved journals and anthologies. Awarded the Perkoff Prize from the Missouri Review and the Red Wheelbarrow Poetry Prize, she believes every poem is a collaboration. More on Instagram @stagehandpoet. Lynne serves on the editorial board at Nimrod International Journal and is co-editor at Papeachu Press, supporting the voices of women and nonbinary creators. Comments are closed.
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