This glasshouse gallery has no ceiling, / and the blood of my callouses is / slicked, like hot oil paint on its walls.
Content warning: body dysmorphia, blood
This glasshouse gallery has no ceiling,
and the blood of my callouses is
slicked, like hot oil paint on its walls.
I try to climb out, and my head anchors
me down. My eyes eclipse a searing red.
There is nothing here but gods of
marble—the hands of Michelangelo.
Moulds that seem impossible to fill.
A Vitruvian army with a laser-
focused gaze, forever fixed on me.
Outside are more eyes—sharp like chisels,
untamed tongues—blunt like chisels.
If my blood were a curtain, I would not feel
the eyes making me wormly. I would not hear
the tongues telling me: “stone statues don’t cry.”
And it rains on the ceiling, but the ceiling
is not there. The rain is the brine that
washes the paint away—crumbling the marble.
The running paint is thick, the broken
statues are sharp; so I slide my fingers
down the razor. I am choking on it all.