Disinfect

Katrina Kaye

Perhaps the only way to heal
is to open the wound.
Water is not always enough
sometimes fire is needed.

Let the sting of disinfectant
sizzle and        smart until  
toxicity subsides.

Extinguish the bacteria
that spreads and breeds in
darkness with alcohol and fire
and antiseptic              burn. 

Promises of reform alone
cannot drive cells to rebuild.
Hopes and prayers and well wishes
do not flush a wound.
They merely dismiss it:

leave it coarse

allow the infection to spread
until it becomes

intolerable

untreatable

consuming

permanent. 

The wound may have
awaken the body, but
the wound must be tended
for evolution to begin.

And evolving is what is needed
in order to heal, to move forward,
to become. Only action can initiate repair.
And repair is necessary, even
if it leaves a scar.

Do not be afraid
of the scar that remains.
It is proof of survival,

of healing,      

of resilience.

It is proof growth is possible.

The scar defines identity and
gifts a narrative to the aftermath
of trauma, wear it like a metal.

Treat it like a blessing.  

 

“Disinfect” is previously published in Door is a Jar (2023) and “no longer water” (2023).

Be Content

Katrina Kaye

with sunlight
through kitchen window

the recorded
sounds of violins and wine
from a stemless glass
with a smudge
of lipstick on the rim

be not disappointed
with each gift
you have wrought

in an attempt to surrender
seclude to kitchen table
ask the weight on
shoulders to retire
enjoy a glass of red wine
and much needed solitude
let the music
move from neckline
to fingertips

as it always has
as it always will

understand every offering
at your fingertips
is hard earned
and the loneliness

that too

has been invited

“Be Content” is previously published in The Green Shoe Sanctuary (2022) and the chapbook No Longer Water (2024).

Sun

Katrina Kaye

Your world is absent of light.
Dust reflected in rare brightness
only to disappear behind western vista.

Enveloped in gloom,
you watch from thick shadows
the world succumbing to the dim,
you fade in the dusk.

If I promise to follow you into the night,
take your path away from the sun
and wrap myself in your darkness,

will you sit beside me,
fingers interlaced with my own,
and watch the sun rise?

“Sun” is previously published in They Don’t Make Memories Like That Anymore (2011).